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dhcp_inittab(4)			 File Formats		       dhcp_inittab(4)

NAME
       dhcp_inittab - information repository for DHCP options

DESCRIPTION
       The  /etc/dhcp/inittab and the /etc/dhcp/inittabv6 files contain infor‐
       mation about the Dynamic Host Configuration  Protocol  (DHCP)  options,
       which  are network configuration parameters passed from DHCP servers to
       DHCP clients when a client machine uses DHCP. Since  many  DHCP-related
       commands must parse and understand these DHCP options, this file serves
       as a central location where information	about  these  options  may  be
       obtained.

       The  DHCP  inittab  and inittabv6 files provide three general pieces of
       information:

	   o	  A mnemonic alias, or symbol name, for	 each  option  number.
		  For  instance,  option  12  is aliased to the name Hostname.
		  This is useful for DHCP-related programs that require	 human
		  interaction, such as dhcpinfo(1).

	   o	  Information  about the syntax for each option. This includes
		  information such as the type	of  the	 value,	 for  example,
		  whether it is a 16-bit integer or an IP address.

	   o	  The  policy  for  what  options  are	visible to which DHCP-
		  related programs.

       If you make any changes to the dhcp_inittab file, note that only	 addi‐
       tions  of  or changes to SITE options are preserved during upgrade. For
       dhcp_inittabv6, no options are preserved during upgrade.

       The VENDOR options defined here are intended for	 use  by  the  Solaris
       DHCP  client  and DHCP management tools. The SUNW vendor space is owned
       by Sun, and changes are likely during upgrade. If you need to configure
       the  Solaris  DHCP  server to support the vendor options of a different
       client, see dhcptab(4) for details.

       Each DHCP option belongs to a certain category, which  roughly  defines
       the scope of the option; for instance, an option may only be understood
       by certain hosts within a given site, or it may be globally  understood
       by  all DHCP clients and servers. The following categories are defined;
       the category names are not case-sensitive:

       STANDARD	   All client and server DHCP  implementations	agree  on  the
		   semantics.  These are administered by the Internet Assigned
		   Numbers Authority (IANA). These options are numbered from 1
		   to 127 for IPv4 DHCP, and 1 to 65535 for DHCPv6.

       SITE	   Within  a  specific site, all client and server implementa‐
		   tions agree on the semantics. However, at another site  the
		   type	 and  meaning  of  the	option may be quite different.
		   These options are numbered from 128 to 254 for  IPv4	 DHCP.
		   DHCPv6 does not support site options.

       VENDOR	   Each	 vendor	 may  define  254  options  (65536 for DHCPv6)
		   unique to that vendor. The vendor is	 identified  within  a
		   DHCP packet by the "Vendor Class" option, number 60 (number
		   17 for DHCPv6). An option with a specific  numeric  identi‐
		   fier	 belonging to one vendor will, in general, have a type
		   and semantics different from that of	 a  different  vendor.
		   Vendor  options  are	 "super-encapsulated"  into the vendor
		   field number 43, as defined in RFC 2132 for IPv4 DHCP,  and
		   number 17 as defined in RFC 3315 for DHCPv6. The dhcp_init‐
		   tab file contains only Sun vendor options.  Define  non-Sun
		   vendor options in the dhcptab file.

       FIELD	   This	 category allows the fixed fields within a DHCP packet
		   to be aliased to a mnemonic name for use with dhcpinfo(1).

       INTERNAL	   This category is internal to the Solaris  DHCP  implementa‐
		   tion and will not be further defined.

   DHCP inittab and inittabv6 Format
       Data entries are written one per line and have seven fields; each entry
       provides information for one option.  Each  field  is  separated	 by  a
       comma,  except  for the first and second, which are separated by white‐
       space (as defined in isspace(3C)). An entry cannot  be  continued  onto
       another	line. Blank lines and those whose first non-whitespace charac‐
       ter is '#' are ignored.

       The fields, in order, are:

	   o	  Mnemonic Identifier

		  The Mnemonic Identifier is a	user-friendly  alias  for  the
		  option  number; it is not case sensitive. This field must be
		  per-category unique and should be unique  across  all	 cate‐
		  gories.  The	option names in the STANDARD, SITE, and VENDOR
		  spaces should not overlap, or the  behavior  will  be	 unde‐
		  fined.  See Mnemonic Identifiers for Options section of this
		  man page for descriptions of the option names.

	   o	  Category (scope)

		  The Category field is one of STANDARD, SITE, VENDOR,	FIELD,
		  or  INTERNAL	and  identifies	 the scope in which the option
		  falls. SITE is not used in inittabv6.

	   o	  Option Number

		  The Option Number is the number of this option when it is in
		  a  DHCP packet. This field should be per-category unique and
		  the STANDARD and SITE fields	should	not  have  overlapping
		  code fields or the behavior is undefined.

	   o	  Data Type

		  Data Type is one of the following values, which are not case
		  sensitive:

		  Ascii	       A printable character string

		  Bool	       Has no value. Scope limited to category limited
			       to INTERNAL. Presence of an option of this type
			       within a Solaris configuration file  represents
			       TRUE, absence represents FALSE.

		  Octet	       An array of bytes

		  Unumber8     An 8-bit unsigned integer

		  Snumber8     An 8-bit signed integer

		  Unumber16    A 16-bit unsigned integer

		  Snumber16    A 16-bit signed integer

		  Unumber24    A 24-bit unsigned integer

		  Unumber32    A 32-bit unsigned integer

		  Snumber32    A 32-bit signed integer

		  Unumber64    A 64-bit unsigned integer

		  Snumber64    A 64-bit signed integer

		  Ip	       An IPv4 address

		  Ipv6	       An IPv6 address

		  Duid	       An RFC 3315 Unique Identifier

		  Domain       An RFC 1035-encoded domain name

	   The	data  type  field  describes an indivisible unit of the option
	   payload, using one of the values listed above.

	   o	  Granularity

		  The Granularity field describes how many  indivisible	 units
		  in the option payload make up a whole value or item for this
		  option. The value must be greater than zero (0) for any data
		  type other than Bool, in which case it must be zero (0).

	   o	  Maximum Number Of Items

		  This value specifies the maximum items of  Granularity which
		  are permissible in a definition using this symbol. For exam‐
		  ple,	there  can  only  be  one  IP  address specified for a
		  subnet mask, so the  Maximum number of	     items  in
		  this case is one (1).	 A   Maximum  value  of zero (0) means
		  that a variable number of items is permitted.

	   o	  Visibility

		  The Visibility field specifies which	DHCP-related  programs
		  make	use  of this information, and should always be defined
		  as sdmi for newly added options.

   Mnemonic Identifiers for IPv4 Options
       The following table maps the mnemonic identifiers used in Solaris  DHCP
       to RFC 2132 options:

	   Symbol	   Code			    Description
       ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
       Subnet		1	      Subnet  Mask,  dotted  Internet  address
				      (IP).
       UTCoffst		2	      Coordinated Universal time offset	 (sec‐
				      onds).
       Router		3	      List of Routers, IP.
       Timeserv		4	      List of RFC-868 servers, IP.
       IEN116ns		5	      List of IEN 116 name servers, IP.
       DNSserv		6	      List of DNS name servers, IP.
       Logserv		7	      List of MIT-LCS UDP log servers, IP.
       Cookie		8	      List of RFC-865 cookie servers, IP.
       Lprserv		9	      List  of	RFC-1179 line printer servers,
				      IP.
       Impress		10	      List of Imagen Impress servers, IP.
       Resource		11	      List  of	 RFC-887   resource   location
				      servers, IP.
       Hostname		12	      Client's	 hostname,  value  from	 hosts
				      database.
       Bootsize		13	      Number  of  512  octet  blocks  in  boot
				      image, NUMBER.
       Dumpfile		14	      Path  where core image should be dumped,
				      ASCII.
       DNSdmain		15	      DNS domain name, ASCII.
       Swapserv		16	      Client's swap server, IP.
       Rootpath		17	      Client's Root path, ASCII.
       ExtendP		18	      Extensions path, ASCII.
       IpFwdF		19	      IP Forwarding Enable/Disable, NUMBER.
       NLrouteF		20	      Non-local Source Routing, NUMBER.
       PFilter		21	      Policy Filter, IP.
       MaxIpSiz		22	      Maximum datagram Reassembly  Size,  NUM‐
				      BER.
       IpTTL		23	      Default  IP  Time	 to Live, (1=<x<=255),
				      NUMBER.
       PathTO		24	      RFC-1191 Path MTU Aging Timeout, NUMBER.
       PathTbl		25	      RFC-1191 Path MTU Plateau Table, NUMBER.
       MTU		26	      Interface MTU, x>=68, NUMBER.
       SameMtuF		27	      All Subnets are Local, NUMBER.
       Broadcst		28	      Broadcast Address, IP.
       MaskDscF		29	      Perform Mask Discovery, NUMBER.
       MaskSupF		30	      Mask Supplier, NUMBER.
       RDiscvyF		31	      Perform Router Discovery, NUMBER.
       RSolictS		32	      Router Solicitation Address, IP.
       StaticRt		33	      Static   Route,	Double	 IP   (network
				      router).
       TrailerF		34	      Trailer Encapsulation, NUMBER.
       ArpTimeO		35	      ARP Cache Time out, NUMBER.
       EthEncap		36	      Ethernet Encapsulation, NUMBER.
       TcpTTL		37	      TCP Default Time to Live, NUMBER.
       TcpKaInt		38	      TCP Keepalive Interval, NUMBER.
       TcpKaGbF		39	      TCP Keepalive Garbage, NUMBER.
       NISdmain		40	      NIS Domain name, ASCII.
       NISservs		41	      List of NIS servers, IP.
       NTPservs		42	      List of NTP servers, IP.
       NetBNms		44	      List of NetBIOS Name servers, IP.
       NetBDsts		45	      List  of	NetBIOS	 Distribution servers,
				      IP.
       NetBNdT		46	      NetBIOS Node type (1=B-node,  2=P,  4=M,
				      8=H).
       NetBScop		47	      NetBIOS scope, ASCII.
       XFontSrv		48	      List of X Window Font servers, IP.
       XDispMgr		49	      List of X Window Display managers, IP.

       LeaseTim		51	      Lease Time Policy, (-1 = PERM), NUMBER.
       Message		56	      Message	to  be	displayed  on  client,
				      ASCII.
       T1Time		58	      Renewal (T1) time, NUMBER.
       T2Time		59	      Rebinding (T2) time, NUMBER.
       NW_dmain		62	      NetWare/IP Domain Name, ASCII.
       NWIPOpts		63	      NetWare/IP   Options,   OCTET   (unknown
				      type).
       NIS+dom		64	      NIS+ Domain name, ASCII.
       NIS+serv		65	      NIS+ servers, IP.
       TFTPsrvN		66	      TFTP server hostname, ASCII.
       OptBootF		67	      Optional Bootfile path, ASCII.
       MblIPAgt		68	      Mobile IP Home Agent, IP.
       SMTPserv		69	      Simple  Mail  Transport Protocol Server,
				      IP.
       POP3serv		70	      Post Office Protocol (POP3) Server, IP.
       NNTPserv		71	      Network  News  Transport	Proto.	(NNTP)
				      Server, IP.
       WWWservs		72	      Default WorldWideWeb Server, IP.
       Fingersv		73	      Default Finger Server, IP.
       IRCservs		74	      Internet Relay Chat Server, IP.
       STservs		75	      StreetTalk Server, IP.
       STDAservs	76	      StreetTalk Directory Assist. Server, IP.
       UserClas		77	      User class information, ASCII.
       SLP_DA		78	      Directory agent, OCTET.
       SLP_SS		79	      Service scope, OCTET.
       AgentOpt		82	      Agent circuit ID, OCTET.
       FQDN		89	      Fully Qualified Domain Name, OCTET.
       PXEarch		93	      Client system architecture, NUMBER.
       BootFile		N/A	      File to Boot, ASCII.
       BootPath		N/A	      Boot  path  prefix  to apply to client's
				      requested boot file, ASCII.
       BootSrvA		N/A	      Boot Server, IP.
       BootSrvN		N/A	      Boot Server Hostname, ASCII.
       EchoVC		N/A	      Echo  Vendor  Class   Identifier	 Flag,
				      (Present=TRUE)
       LeaseNeg		N/A	      Lease is Negotiable Flag, (Present=TRUE)

   Mnemonic Identifiers for IPv6 Options
       The  following table maps the mnemonic identifiers used in Solaris DHCP
       to RFC 3315, 3319, 3646, 3898, 4075, and 4280 options:

	   Symbol	   Code			  Description
       ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
       ClientID		1	      Unique identifier for client, DUID
       ServerID		2	      Unique identifier for server, DUID
       Preference	7	      Server preference, NUMBER
       Unicast		12	      Unicast server address, IPV6
       UserClass	15	      User classes for client, OCTET
       VendorClass	16	      Vendor client hardware items, OCTET
       SIPNames		21	      SIP proxy server name list, DOMAIN
       SIPAddresses	22	      SIP proxy server addresses in pref‐
				      erence order, IPV6
       DNSAddresses	23	      DNS  server addresses in preference
				      order, IPV6
       DNSSearch	24	      DNS search list, DOMAIN
       NISServers	27	      NIS server addresses in  preference
				      order, IPV6
       NIS+Servers	28	      NIS+ server addresses in preference
				      order, IPV6
       NISDomain	29	      NIS domain name, DOMAIN
       NIS+Domain	30	      NIS+ domain name, DOMAIN

       SNTPServers	31	      IPV6
       InfoRefresh	32	      UNUMBER32
       BCMCDomain	33	      Broadcast/multicast control  server
				      name list, DOMAIN
       BCMCAddresses	34	      Broadcast/multicast  control server
				      addresses, IPV6

EXAMPLES
       Example 1 Altering the DHCP inittab File

       In general, the DHCP inittab file should only be altered	 to  add  SITE
       options.	 If  other  options  are added, they will not be automatically
       carried forward when the system is upgraded. For instance:

	 ipPairs    SITE, 132, IP, 2, 0, sdmi

       describes an option named ipPairs, that is in the SITE  category.  That
       is,  it	is  defined  by each individual site, and is  option code 132,
       which is of type IP Address, consisting	of a potentially infinite num‐
       ber of pairs of IP addresses.

FILES
	 /etc/dhcp/inittab
	 /etc/dhcp/inittabv6

ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(5)  for descriptions of the following attributes:

       ┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
       │      ATTRIBUTE TYPE	     │	    ATTRIBUTE VALUE	   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │Availability		     │SUNWcsr			   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │Interface Stability	     │Committed			   │
       └─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘

SEE ALSO
       dhcpinfo(1),dhcpagent(1M),   isspace(3C),   dhcptab(4),	attributes(5),
       dhcp(5), dhcp_modules(5)

       Alexander, S., and R. Droms. RFC 2132, DHCP Options  and	 BOOTP	Vendor
       Extensions. Network Working Group. March 1997.

       Droms, R.  RFC 2131, Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol. Network Work‐
       ing Group. March 1997.

       Droms, R. RFC  3315,  Dynamic  Host  Configuration  Protocol  for  IPv6
       (DHCPv6). Cisco Systems. July 2003.

       Schulzrinne, H., and B. Volz. RFC 3319, Dynamic Host Configuration Pro‐
       tocol (DHCPv6) Options for Session Initiation Protocol  (SIP)  Servers.
       Columbia University and Ericsson. July 2003.

       Droms, R. RFC 3646, DNS Configuration options for Dynamic Host Configu‐
       ration Protocol for IPv6 (DHCPv6). Cisco Systems. December 2003.

       Kalusivalingam, V. RFC 3898, Network Information Service (NIS) Configu‐
       ration  Options	for  Dynamic  Host  Configuration  Protocol  for  IPv6
       (DHCPv6). Cisco Systems. October 2004.

       Chowdhury, K., P. Yegani, and L. Madour. RFC 4280, Dynamic Host Config‐
       uration	Protocol  (DHCP)  Options  for Broadcast and Multicast Control
       Servers. Starent Networks, Cisco Systems, and Ericsson. November 2005.

       Mockapetris, P.V. RFC 1035, Domain names - implementation and  specifi‐
       cation. ISI. November 1987.

SunOS 5.10			  4 Jan 2007		       dhcp_inittab(4)
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