We have a large number of freelancers and transient workers. With long
lease times we sometimes hit the limit of the lease range on the server.
Keeping it short means that the IPs are available again for us more
quickly.

 

From: Steve Moffat [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of NTSysAdmin
Sent: 15 September 2008 12:31
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: DHCP fail-over

 

Why are your leases so short??

 

S

 

From: Oliver Marshall [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2008 6:50 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: DHCP fail-over

 

Hi chaps,

 

I'm looking at setting up DHCP failover on our two servers here so that
if one goes down (as it did this morning) the DHCP leases wont expire
and chop off the workstations at the legs. 

 

On the web it seems fairly easy in 2003 so thats a good thing. However
can someone confirm something for me?

 

It seems to be that I need to add both machines to the DNSUpdateProxy
group and that each machine needs to be (can be) setup using the same
scope details. However, each machine needs to have excluded the other
machines part of the IP range ? That is, if serverA does .1-.50 then
ServerB needs 1-50 in the exclusion and if ServerB does 51-100 then
ServerA needs 51-100 in it's exclusion.

 

Is that right? My question is really whether it has to be an exclusion
or whether I can simply set the range up each box so that A has a range
of 1-50 and B has a range of 51-100.

 

Any ideas ?

 

Olly

 

 

 

 

 

 

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