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 ] [ 
-df duid-lease-file ] [
  
-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 maintains a
  list of IP addresses which may be assigned on one or more subnets. 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
  instructions. It then gets a list of all the network interfaces that are
  configured in the current system. For each interface, it attempts to configure
  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 arbitrarily 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 database, 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 configuration 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 
syslog(3) facility.
OPTIONS¶
  - -4
 
  - Use the DHCPv4 protocol to obtain an IPv4 address and configuration
      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 systems. 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 useful 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 transmit, 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
      simulating 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 overridden by setting a client id in the
      configuration file. Overridding 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 disables
      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 identifier 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 particularly
  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.
 
  - -df duid-lease-file
 
  - Path to a secondary lease file. If the primary lease file doesn't contain
      a DUID this file will be searched. The DUID read from the secondary will
      be written to the primary. This option can be used to allow an IPv4
      instance of the client to share a DUID with an IPv6 instance. After
      starting one of the instances the second can be started with this option
      pointing to the lease file of the first instance. There is no default. If
      no file is specified no search is made for a DUID should one not be found
      in the main lease 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
      CLIENTBINDIR/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 running, 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 interfaces 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 command-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 Stanford.
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.