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dhclient(8)							   dhclient(8)

NAME
       dhclient - Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol Client

SYNOPSIS
       dhclient	 [ -4 | -6 ] [ -S ] [ -N [ -N...  ] ] [ -T [ -T...  ] ] [ -P [
       -P...  ] ] [ -i ] [ -I ] [ -D LL|LLT ] [ -p port-number ] [ -d ]	 [  -e
       VAR=value ] [ -q ] [ -1 ] [ -r | -x ] [ -lf lease-file ] [ -pf pid-file
       ] [ --no-pid ] [ -cf config-file ] [ -sf script-file ] [ -s server-addr
       ]  [  -g	 relay	]  [  -n ] [ -nw ] [ -w ] [ -v ] [ --version ] [ if0 [
       ...ifN ] ]

DESCRIPTION
       The Internet Systems Consortium DHCP Client, dhclient, provides a means
       for  configuring	 one or more network interfaces using the Dynamic Host
       Configuration Protocol, BOOTP protocol, or if these protocols fail,  by
       statically assigning an address.

OPERATION
       The DHCP protocol allows a host to contact a central server which main‐
       tains a list of IP addresses which may be assigned on one or more  sub‐
       nets.   A  DHCP	client may request an address from this pool, and then
       use it on a temporary basis for communication  on  network.   The  DHCP
       protocol also provides a mechanism whereby a client can learn important
       details about the network to which it is attached, such as the location
       of a default router, the location of a name server, and so on.

       There  are  two	versions  of  the DHCP protocol DHCPv4 and DHCPv6.  At
       startup the client may be started for one or the other via the -4 or -6
       options.

       On startup, dhclient reads the dhclient.conf for configuration instruc‐
       tions.  It then gets a list of all the network interfaces that are con‐
       figured in the current system.  For each interface, it attempts to con‐
       figure the interface using the DHCP protocol.

       In order to keep track of  leases  across  system  reboots  and	server
       restarts,  dhclient  keeps a list of leases it has been assigned in the
       dhclient.leases file.  On  startup,  after  reading  the	 dhclient.conf
       file,  dhclient	reads  the  dhclient.leases file to refresh its memory
       about what leases it has been assigned.

       When a new lease is  acquired,  it  is  appended	 to  the  end  of  the
       dhclient.leases file.  In order to prevent the file from becoming arbi‐
       trarily large, from time to time dhclient creates a new dhclient.leases
       file  from  its	in-core	 lease	database.   The	 old  version  of  the
       dhclient.leases file is retained under the name dhclient.leases~	 until
       the next time dhclient rewrites the database.

       Old  leases are kept around in case the DHCP server is unavailable when
       dhclient is first invoked (generally during  the	 initial  system  boot
       process).   In  that  event,  old  leases from the dhclient.leases file
       which have not yet expired are tested, and if they are determined to be
       valid,  they  are  used	until  either  they  expire or the DHCP server
       becomes available.

       A mobile host which may sometimes need to access a network on which  no
       DHCP server exists may be preloaded with a lease for a fixed address on
       that network.  When all attempts to contact a DHCP server have  failed,
       dhclient	 will  try  to	validate the static lease, and if it succeeds,
       will use that lease until it is restarted.

       A mobile host may also travel to some networks on  which	 DHCP  is  not
       available  but  BOOTP  is.   In	that  case,  it may be advantageous to
       arrange with the network administrator for an entry on the BOOTP	 data‐
       base,  so  that	the  host can boot quickly on that network rather than
       cycling through the list of old leases.

COMMAND LINE
       The names of the network interfaces that	 dhclient  should  attempt  to
       configure  may be specified on the command line.	 If no interface names
       are specified on the command line dhclient will normally	 identify  all
       network	interfaces,  eliminating non-broadcast interfaces if possible,
       and attempt to configure each interface.

       It is also possible to specify interfaces by name in the	 dhclient.conf
       file.   If  interfaces  are specified in this way, then the client will
       only configure interfaces that are either specified in  the  configura‐
       tion file or on the command line, and will ignore all other interfaces.

       The  client  normally prints no output during its startup sequence.  It
       can be made to emit verbose messages displaying	the  startup  sequence
       events  until  it  has  acquired an address by supplying the -v command
       line argument.  In either case, the client logs messages using the sys‐
       log(3) facility.

OPTIONS
       -4     Use the DHCPv4 protocol to obtain an IPv4 address and configura‐
	      tion parameters.	This is the default  and  cannot  be  combined
	      with -6.

       -6     Use  the	DHCPv6	protocol to obtain whatever IPv6 addresses are
	      available along with configuration  parameters.	It  cannot  be
	      combined with -4.	 The -S -T -P -N and -D arguments provide more
	      control over aspects of the DHCPv6 processing.  Note: it is  not
	      recommended  to  mix queries of different types together or even
	      to share the lease file between them.

       -1     Try to get a lease once.	On  failure  exit  with	 code  2.   In
	      DHCPv6 this sets the maximum duration of the initial exchange to
	      timeout (from dhclient.conf with a default of sixty seconds).

       -d     Force dhclient to run as a  foreground  process.	 Normally  the
	      DHCP  client  will run in the foreground until is has configured
	      an interface at which time it will  revert  to  running  in  the
	      background.  This option is useful when running the client under
	      a debugger, or when running it out of inittab on System  V  sys‐
	      tems.  This implies -v.

       -nw    Become  a	 daemon immediately (nowait) rather than waiting until
	      an IP address has been acquired.

       -q     Be quiet at startup, this is the default.

       -v     Enable verbose log messages.

       -w     Continue running even if no  broadcast  interfaces  were	found.
	      Normally	DHCP client will exit if it isn't able to identify any
	      network interfaces to configure.	On laptop computers and	 other
	      computers	 with  hot-swappable  I/O buses, it is possible that a
	      broadcast interface may be added	after  system  startup.	  This
	      flag can be used to cause the client not to exit when it doesn't
	      find any such interfaces.	 The omshell(1) program	 can  then  be
	      used  to	notify	the  client  when a network interface has been
	      added or removed, so that the client can attempt to configure an
	      IP address on that interface.

       -n     Do not configure any interfaces.	This is most likely to be use‐
	      ful in combination with the -w flag.

       -e VAR=value
	      Define additional	 environment  variables	 for  the  environment
	      where  dhclient-script  executes.	  You  may specify multiple -e
	      options on the command line.

       -r     Release the current lease and stop the running  DHCP  client  as
	      previously  recorded  in	the  PID file.	When shutdown via this
	      method dhclient-script will be executed with the specific reason
	      for calling the script set.  The client normally doesn't release
	      the current lease as this is not required by the	DHCP  protocol
	      but  some	 cable ISPs require their clients to notify the server
	      if they wish to release an assigned IP address.

       -x     Stop the running	DHCP  client  without  releasing  the  current
	      lease.   Kills  existing dhclient process as previously recorded
	      in the PID file.	When shutdown via this method  dhclient-script
	      will be executed with the specific reason for calling the script
	      set.

       -p port-number
	      The UDP port number on which the DHCP client should  listen  and
	      transmit.	 If unspecified, dhclient uses the default port of 68.
	      This is mostly useful for debugging purposes.   If  a  different
	      port  is	specified on which the client should listen and trans‐
	      mit, the client will also use a different destination port - one
	      less than the specified port.

       -s server-addr
	      Specify  the server IP address or fully qualified domain name to
	      use as a destination for DHCP protocol messages before  dhclient
	      has  acquired an IP address.  Normally, dhclient transmits these
	      messages to 255.255.255.255 (the IP limited broadcast  address).
	      Overriding  this	is mostly useful for debugging purposes.  This
	      feature is not supported in DHCPv6 (-6) mode.

       -g relay
	      Set the giaddr field of all packets to the relay IP address sim‐
	      ulating  a  relay	 agent.	 This is for testing purposes only and
	      should not be expected to work in any consistent or useful way.

       -i     Use a DUID with DHCPv4 clients.  If no DUID is available in  the
	      lease  file one will be constructed and saved.  The DUID will be
	      used to construct	 a  RFC4361  style  client  id	that  will  be
	      included	in the client's messages.  This client id can be over‐
	      ridden by setting a client id in the configuration file.	 Over‐
	      ridding the client id in this fashion is discouraged.

       -I     Use the standard DDNS scheme from RFCs 4701 & 4702.

       --version
	      Print version number and exit.

       Options available for DHCPv6 mode:

       -S     Use  Information-request	to  get	 only  stateless configuration
	      parameters (i.e., without address).  This implies -6.   It  also
	      doesn't rewrite the lease database.

       -T     Ask  for	IPv6  temporary	 addresses, one set per -T flag.  This
	      implies -6 and also disables the normal address query.   See  -N
	      to restore it.

       -P     Enable  IPv6  prefix  delegation.	 This implies -6 and also dis‐
	      ables the normal address query.  See -N  to  restore  it.	  Note
	      only one requested interface is allowed.

       -D LL or LLT
	      Override the default when selecting the type of DUID to use.  By
	      default, DHCPv6 dhclient creates	an  identifier	based  on  the
	      link-layer  address (DUID-LL) if it is running in stateless mode
	      (with -S, not requesting an address), or it creates  an  identi‐
	      fier based on the link-layer address plus a timestamp (DUID-LLT)
	      if it is running in stateful mode	 (without  -S,	requesting  an
	      address).	  When	DHCPv4	is  configured	to use a DUID using -i
	      option the default is to use a  DUID-LLT.	  -D  overrides	 these
	      default, with a value of either LL or LLT.

       -N     Restore  normal  address query for IPv6. This implies -6.	 It is
	      used to restore normal operation after using -T or -P.

       Modifying default file locations: The following options can be used  to
       modify the locations a client uses for its files.  They can be particu‐
       larly useful if, for example, DBDIR or RUNDIR  have  not	 been  mounted
       when the DHCP client is started.

       -cf config-file
	      Path  to	the  client  configuration  file.  If unspecified, the
	      default ETCDIR/dhclient.conf is used.  See dhclient.conf(5)  for
	      a description of this file.

       -lf lease-file
	      Path  to	the  lease database file.  If unspecified, the default
	      DBDIR/dhclient.leases is used.   See  dhclient.leases(5)	for  a
	      description of this file.

       -pf pid-file
	      Path  to	the  process  ID  file.	  If  unspecified, the default
	      RUNDIR/dhclient.pid is used.

       --no-pid
	      Option to disable writing pid files.   By	 default  the  program
	      will  write  a  pid  file.   If the program is invoked with this
	      option it will not attempt to kill any existing client processes
	      even if invoked with -r or -x.

       -sf script-file
	      Path  to	the  network  configuration script invoked by dhclient
	      when it gets a  lease.   If  unspecified,	 the  default  CLIENT‐
	      BINDIR/dhclient-script  is  used.	  See dhclient-script(8) for a
	      description of this file.

CONFIGURATION
       The syntax of the dhclient.conf(5) file is discussed separately.

OMAPI
       The DHCP client provides some ability to control it while  it  is  run‐
       ning, without stopping it.  This capability is provided using OMAPI, an
       API for manipulating remote objects.   OMAPI  clients  connect  to  the
       client  using  TCP/IP,  authenticate, and can then examine the client's
       current status and make changes to it.

       Rather than implementing the underlying OMAPI protocol  directly,  user
       programs	 should	 use  the  dhcpctl  API or OMAPI itself.  Dhcpctl is a
       wrapper that handles some of the housekeeping chores  that  OMAPI  does
       not  do	automatically.	Dhcpctl and OMAPI are documented in dhcpctl(3)
       and omapi(3).  Most things you'd want to do with the client can be done
       directly	 using	the  omshell(1) command, rather than having to write a
       special program.

THE CONTROL OBJECT
       The control object allows you to shut the client	 down,	releasing  all
       leases  that  it	 holds and deleting any DNS records it may have added.
       It also allows you to pause the client - this unconfigures  any	inter‐
       faces the client is using.  You can then restart it, which causes it to
       reconfigure those interfaces.  You  would  normally  pause  the	client
       prior  to  going	 into  hibernation or sleep on a laptop computer.  You
       would then resume it after the power comes back.	 This allows PC	 cards
       to be shut down while the computer is hibernating or sleeping, and then
       reinitialized to their previous state once the computer	comes  out  of
       hibernation or sleep.

       The  control  object  has one attribute - the state attribute.  To shut
       the client down, set its state attribute to 2.  It  will	 automatically
       do  a  DHCPRELEASE.   To	 pause	it,  set its state attribute to 3.  To
       resume it, set its state attribute to 4.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       The following environment variables may	be  defined  to	 override  the
       builtin defaults for file locations.  Note that use of the related com‐
       mand-line options will ignore the  corresponding	 environment  variable
       settings.

       PATH_DHCLIENT_CONF
	      The dhclient.conf configuration file.

       PATH_DHCLIENT_DB
	      The dhclient.leases database.

       PATH_DHCLIENT_PID
	      The dhclient PID file.

       PATH_DHCLIENT_SCRIPT
	      The dhclient-script file.

FILES
       CLIENTBINDIR/dhclient-script,			 ETCDIR/dhclient.conf,
       DBDIR/dhclient.leases, RUNDIR/dhclient.pid, DBDIR/dhclient.leases~.

SEE ALSO
       dhcpd(8),    dhcrelay(8),     dhclient-script(8),     dhclient.conf(5),
       dhclient.leases(5), dhcp-eval(5).

AUTHOR
       dhclient(8)  To	learn  more  about  Internet  Systems  Consortium, see
       https://www.isc.org

       This client was substantially modified and enhanced by Elliot Poger for
       use  on	Linux while he was working on the MosquitoNet project at Stan‐
       ford.

       The current version owes much to Elliot's Linux enhancements,  but  was
       substantially reorganized and partially rewritten by Ted Lemon so as to
       use the same networking framework that the Internet Systems  Consortium
       DHCP  server  uses.   Much system-specific configuration code was moved
       into a shell script so that as support for more	operating  systems  is
       added,  it  will	 not be necessary to port and maintain system-specific
       configuration code to these operating  systems  -  instead,  the	 shell
       script can invoke the native tools to accomplish the same purpose.

								   dhclient(8)
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