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23.3. Configuring a DHCP Client
The first step for configuring a DHCP client is to make sure the kernel recognizes the network interface card. Most cards are recognized during the installation process and the system is configured to use the correct kernel module for the card. If a card is added after installation, Kudzu [8] will recognize it and prompt you for the proper kernel module (Be sure to check the Hardware Compatibility List at http://hardware.redhat.com/hcl/). If either the installation program or kudzu does not recognize the network card, you can load the correct kernel module (refer to Chapter 45, General Parameters and Modules for details).
To configure a DHCP client manually, modify the
/etc/sysconfig/network
file to enable networking and the configuration file for each network device in the /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts
directory. In this directory, each device should have a configuration file named ifcfg-eth0
, where eth0
is the network device name.
The
/etc/sysconfig/network
file should contain the following line:
NETWORKING=yes
The
NETWORKING
variable must be set to yes
if you want networking to start at boot time.
The
/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0
file should contain the following lines:
DEVICE=eth0 BOOTPROTO=dhcp ONBOOT=yes
A configuration file is needed for each device to be configured to use DHCP.
Other options for the network script includes:
DHCP_HOSTNAME
— Only use this option if the DHCP server requires the client to specify a hostname before receiving an IP address. (The DHCP server daemon in Red Hat Enterprise Linux does not support this feature.)PEERDNS=<answer>
, where<answer>
is one of the following:yes
— Modify/etc/resolv.conf
with information from the server. If using DHCP, thenyes
is the default.no
— Do not modify/etc/resolv.conf
.
SRCADDR=<address>
, where<address>
is the specified source IP address for outgoing packets.USERCTL=<answer>
, where<answer>
is one of the following:yes
— Non-root users are allowed to control this device.no
— Non-root users are not allowed to control this device.
If you prefer using a graphical interface, refer to Chapter 17, Network Configuration for instructions on using the Network Administration Tool to configure a network interface to use DHCP.
Note
For advanced configurations of client DHCP options such as protocol timing, lease requirements and requests, dynamic DNS support, aliases, as well as a wide variety of values to override, prepend, or append to client-side configurations, refer to the
dhclient
and dhclient.conf
man pages.
[8]
Kudzu is a hardware probing tool run at system boot time to determine what hardware has been added or removed from the system.