Manual:IP/DHCP Server

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Applies to RouterOS: v3, v4, v5+


Summary

Standards: RFC 2131, RFC 3633
Package: dhcp


The DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) is needed for easy distribution of IP addresses in a network. The MikroTik RouterOS implementation includes both server and client parts and is compliant with RFC 2131.

The router supports an individual server for each Ethernet-like interface. The MikroTik RouterOS DHCP server supports the basic functions of giving each requesting client an IP address/netmask lease, default gateway, domain name, DNS-server(s) and WINS-server(s) (for Windows clients) information (set up in the DHCP networks submenu)

In order DHCP server to work, you must set up also IP pools (do not include the DHCP server's own IP address into the pool range) and DHCP networks.

It is also possible to hand out leases for DHCP clients using the RADIUS server, here are listed the parameters for used in RADIUS server.


Access-Request:

  • NAS-Identifier - router identity
  • NAS-IP-Address - IP address of the router itself
  • NAS-Port - unique session ID
  • NAS-Port-Type - Ethernet
  • Calling-Station-Id - client identifier (active-client-id)
  • Framed-IP-Address - IP address of the client (active-address)
  • Called-Station-Id - name of DHCP server
  • User-Name - MAC address of the client (active-mac-address)
  • Password - ""

Access-Accept:

  • Framed-IP-Address - IP address that will be assigned to client
  • Framed-Pool - ip pool from which to assign ip address to client
  • Rate-Limit - Datarate limitation for DHCP clients. Format is: rx-rate[/tx-rate] [rx-burst-rate[/tx-burst-rate] [rx-burst-threshold[/tx-burst-threshold] [rx-burst-time[/tx-burst-time][priority] [rx-rate-min[/tx-rate-min]]]]. All rates should be numbers with optional 'k' (1,000s) or 'M' (1,000,000s). If tx-rate is not specified, rx-rate is as tx-rate too. Same goes for tx-burst-rate and tx-burst-threshold and tx-burst-time. If both rx-burst-threshold and tx-burst-threshold are not specified (but burst-rate is specified), rx-rate and tx-rate are used as burst thresholds. If both rx-burst-time and tx-burst-time are not specified, 1s is used as default. Priority takes values 1..8, where 1 implies the highest priority, but 8 - the lowest. If rx-rate-min and tx-rate-min are not specified rx-rate and tx-rate values are used. The rx-rate-min and tx-rate-min values can not exceed rx-rate and tx-rate values.
  • Ascend-Data-Rate - tx/rx data rate limitation if multiple attributes are provided, first limits tx data rate, second - rx data rate. If used together with Ascend-Xmit-Rate, specifies rx rate. 0 if unlimited
  • Ascend-Xmit-Rate - tx data rate limitation. It may be used to specify tx limit only instead of sending two sequential Ascend-Data-Rate attributes (in that case Ascend-Data-Rate will specify the receive rate). 0 if unlimited
  • Session-Timeout - max lease time (lease-time)

Quick Setup Guide

RouterOS has built in command that lets you easily set up DHCP server. Lets say we want to configure DHCP server on ether1 interface to lend addresses from 192.168.0.2 to 192.168.0.254 which belong to the 192.168.0.0/24 network. The gateway and DNS server is 192.168.0.1.

From /ip dhcp-server menu run setup command and follow instructions:

[admin@MikroTik] ip dhcp-server> setup
Select interface to run DHCP server on

dhcp server interface: ether1
Select network for DHCP addresses

dhcp address space: 192.168.0.0/24
Select gateway for given network

gateway for dhcp network: 192.168.0.1
Select pool of ip addresses given out by DHCP server

addresses to give out: 192.168.0.2-192.168.0254
Select DNS servers

dns servers: 192.168.0.1
Select lease time

lease time: 3d
[admin@MikroTik] ip dhcp-server>
      


The wizard has made the following configuration based on the answers above:

[admin@MikroTik] ip dhcp-server> print
Flags: X - disabled, I - invalid
  #   NAME            INTERFACE RELAY           ADDRESS-POOL LEASE-TIME ADD-ARP
  0   dhcp1           ether1    0.0.0.0         dhcp_pool1   3d         no

[admin@MikroTik] ip dhcp-server> network print
  # ADDRESS            GATEWAY         DNS-SERVER      WINS-SERVER     DOMAIN
  0 192.168.0.0/24        192.168.0.1        192.168.0.1

[admin@MikroTik] ip dhcp-server> /ip pool print
  # NAME                                        RANGES
  0 dhcp_pool1                                  192.168.0.2-192.168.0.254

[admin@MikroTik] ip dhcp-server>


IPv6

Starting from v5.8 RouterOS supports IPv6 prefix delegation according to RFC 3633.

DHCPv6 server works in parallel with regular DHCP server when address-pool6 option is set. DHCPv6 uses following options:

  • authoritative
  • lease-time
  • address-pool6
  • interface
  • name

General

Sub-menu: /ip dhcp-server


Property Description
add-arp (yes | no; Default: no) Whether to add dynamic ARP entry. If set to no either ARP mode should be enabled on that interface or static ARP entries should be administratively defined in /ip arp submenu.
address-pool (string | static-only; Default: static-only) IP pool, from which to take IP addresses for the clients. If set to static-only, then only the clients that have a static lease (added in lease submenu) will be allowed.
address-pool6 (string | static-only; Default: static-only) IPv6 pool, from which to take IPv6 prefix for the clients. If set to static-only, then only the clients that have a static binding (added in bindings submenu) will be allowed.
always-broadcast (yes | no; Default: no) Always send replies as broadcasts.
authoritative (after-10sec-delay | after-2sec-delay | yes | no; Default: after-2sec-delay) Whether the DHCP server is the only one DHCP server for the network:
  • after-10sec-delay - to clients request for an address, dhcp server will wait 10 seconds and if there is another request from the client after this period of time, then dhcp server will offer the address to the client or will send DHCPNAK, if the requested address is not available from this server
  • after-2sec-delay - to clients request for an address, dhcp server will wait 2 seconds and if there is another request from the client after this period of time, then dhcp server will offer the address to the client or will send DHCPNAK, if the requested address is not available from this server
  • yes - to clients request for an address that is not available from this server, dhcp server will send negative acknowledgment (DHCPNAK)
  • no - dhcp server ignores clients requests for addresses that are not available from this server
boot-support (none | static | dynamic; Default: static) Support for BOOTP clients:
  • none - do not respond to BOOTP requests
  • static - offer only static leases to BOOTP clients
  • dynamic - offer static and dynamic leases for BOOTP clients
delay-threshold (time | none; Default: none) If secs field in DHCP packet is smaller than delay-threshold, then this packet is ignored. If set to none - there is no threshold (all DHCP packets are processed)
interface (string; Default: ) Interface on which server will be running.
lease-time (time; Default: 72h) The time that a client may use the assigned address. The client will try to renew this address after a half of this time and will request a new address after time limit expires.
name (string; Default: ) Reference name
relay (IP; Default: 0.0.0.0) The IP address of the relay this DHCP server should process requests from:
  • 0.0.0.0 - the DHCP server will be used only for direct requests from clients (no DHCP really allowed)
  • 255.255.255.255 - the DHCP server should be used for any incomming request from a DHCP relay except for those, which are processed by another DHCP server that exists in the /ip dhcp-server submenu.
src-address (IP; Default: 0.0.0.0) The address which the DHCP client must send requests to in order to renew an IP address lease. If there is only one static address on the DHCP server interface and the source-address is left as 0.0.0.0, then the static address will be used. If there are multiple addresses on the interface, an address in the same subnet as the range of given addresses should be used.
use-radius (yes | no; Default: no) Whether to use RADIUS server for dynamic leases


Menu specific commands

Property Description
setup () Start DHCP server setup wizard, which guides you through the steps to easily create all necessary configuration. Read more>>


Bindings

Sub-menu: /ip dhcp-server bindings6


This menu shows IPv6 prefixes assigned to the clients. Static bindings are matched against MAC address not by full DUID.

DUID is used only for dynamic bindings, so if it changes then client will receive different prefix than previously.


Property Description
address (IPv6 prefix | Pool name; Default: ) IPv6 prefix that will be assigned to the client
comment (string; Default: ) Short description of an item.
disabled (yes | no; Default: no) Whether item is disabled
life-time (time; Default: 3d) Time period after which binding expires/
mac-address (MAC; Default: )
server (string | all; Default: all) Name of the server


Read-only properties

Property Description
dynamic (yes | no) Whether item is dynamically created.
expire-time (time) Time period after which binding expires.
last-seen (time) Time period since client was last seen.
status (waiting | offered | bound) Three status vales are possible:
  • waiting - Shown for static bindings if it is not used. For dynamic bindings this status is shown if it was used previously, server will wait 10 minutes to allow old client to get this binding, otherwise binding will be cleared and prefix willbe offered to other clients.
  • offered - if solicit message was received, and server responded with advertise message, but request was not received. During this state client have 2 minutes to get this binding, otherwise it is freed or changed status to waiting for static bindings.
  • bound - currently bound.


For example, dynamically assigned /62 prefix

[admin@RB493G] /ip dhcp-server binding> print detail 
Flags: X - disabled, D - dynamic 
 0 D address=2a02:610::/62 mac-address=00:24:1D:17:81:F7 server=local-dhcp 
     life-time=3d status=bound expire-time=2d22h46m21s last-seen=1h13m39s 


Menu specific commands

Property Description
make-static () Set dynamic binding as static.

Lease Store Configuration

Sub-menu: /ip dhcp-server config

This sub-menu allows to configure how often DHCP leases will be stored on disk. If they would be saved on disk on every lease change, a lot of disk writes would happen which is very bad for Compact Flash (especially, if lease times are very short). To minimize writes on disk, all changes are saved on disk every store-leases-disk seconds. Additionally leases are always stored on disk on graceful shutdown and reboot.


This sub-menu has only one configurable property:

Property Description
store-leases-disk (time | immediately | never; Default: 5m) How frequently lease changes should be stored on disk

Networks

Sub-menu: /ip dhcp-server network


Property Description
address (IP/netmask; Default: ) the network DHCP server(s) will lend addresses from
boot-file-name (string; Default: ) Boot file name
dhcp-option (string; Default: ) Add additional DHCP options from option list.
dns-server (string; Default: ) the DHCP client will use these as the default DNS servers. Two comma-separated DNS servers can be specified to be used by DHCP client as primary and secondary DNS servers
domain (string; Default: ) The DHCP client will use this as the 'DNS domain' setting for the network adapter.
gateway (IP; Default: 0.0.0.0) The default gateway to be used by DHCP Client.
netmask (integer: 0..32; Default: 0) The actual network mask to be used by DHCP client. If set to '0' - netmask from network address will be used.
next-server (IP; Default: ) IP address of next server to use in bootstrap.
ntp-server (IP; Default: ) the DHCP client will use these as the default NTP servers. Two comma-separated NTP servers can be specified to be used by DHCP client as primary and secondary NTP servers
wins-server (IP; Default: ) The Windows DHCP client will use these as the default WINS servers. Two comma-separated WINS servers can be specified to be used by DHCP client as primary and secondary WINS servers

Leases

Sub-menu: /ip dhcp-server lease


DHCP server lease submenu is used to monitor and manage server's leases. The issued leases are showed here as dynamic entries. You can also add static leases to issue a particular client (identified by MAC address) the desired IP address.

Generally, the DHCP lease it allocated as follows:

  • an unused lease is in waiting state
  • if a client asks for an IP address, the server chooses one
  • if the client will receive statically assigned address, the lease becomes offered, and then bound with the respective lease time
  • if the client will receive a dynamic address (taken from an IP address pool), the router sends a ping packet and waits for answer for 0.5 seconds. During this time, the lease is marked testing
  • in case, the address does not respond, the lease becomes offered, and then bound with the respective lease time
  • in other case, the lease becomes busy for the lease time (there is a command to retest all busy addresses), and the client's request remains unanswered (the client will try again shortly)

A client may free the leased address. The dynamic lease is removed, and the allocated address is returned to the address pool. But the static lease becomes busy until the client will reacquire the address.

Note: that the IP addresses assigned statically are not probed.



Properties

Property Description
address (IP; Default: ) Specify ip address (or ip pool) for static lease. If set to 0.0.0.0 - pool from server will be used
always-broadcast (yes | no; Default: ) Send all repies as broadcasts
block-access (yes | no; Default: no) Block access for this client
client-id (string; Default: ) If specified, must match DHCP 'client identifier' option of the request
lease-time (time; Default: 0s) Time that the client may use the address. If set to 0s lease will never expire.
mac-address (MAC; Default: 00:00:00:00:00:00) If specified, must match the MAC address of the client
src-mac-address (MAC; Default: ) Source MAC address
use-src-mac (MAC; Default: ) Use this source MAC address instead


Read only properties

Property Description
active-address (IP) Actual IP address for this lease
active-client-id (string) Actual client-id of the client
active-mac-address (MAC) Actual MAC address of the client
active-server (list) Actual dhcp server, which serves this client
agent-circuit-id (string) Circuit ID of DHCP relay agent
agent-remote-id (string) Remote ID, set by DHCP relay agent
blocked ( flag ) Whether the lease is blocked
expires-after (time) Time until lease expires
host-name (text) Shows host name option from last received DHCP request
radius (yes | no) Shows, whether this dynamic lease is authenticated by RADIUS or not
rate-limit (string) Sets rate limit for active lease. Format is: rx-rate[/tx-rate] [rx-burst-rate[/tx-burst-rate] [rx-burst-threshold[/tx-burst-threshold] [rx-burst-time[/tx-burst-time]]]]. All rates should be numbers with optional 'k' (1,000s) or 'M' (1,000,000s). If tx-rate is not specified, rx-rate is as tx-rate too. Same goes for tx-burst-rate and tx-burst-threshold and tx-burst-time. If both rx-burst-threshold and tx-burst-threshold are not specified (but burst-rate is specified), rx-rate and tx-rate is used as burst thresholds. If both rx-burst-time and tx-burst-time are not specified, 1s is used as default
server (string) Server name which serves this client
status (waiting | testing | authorizing | busy | offered | bound) Lease status:
  • waiting - not used static lease
  • testing - testing whether this address is used or not (only for dynamic leases) by pinging it with timeout of 0.5s
  • authorizing - waiting for response from radius server
  • busy - this address is assigned statically to a client or already exists in the network, so it can not be leased
  • offered - server has offered this lease to a client, but did not receive confirmation from the client
  • bound - server has received client's confirmation that it accepts offered address, it is using it now and will free the address not later, than the lease time will be over


Menu specific commands

Property Description
check-status (id) Check status of a given busy dynamic lease, and free it in case of no response
make-static (id) Convert a dynamic lease to a static one


Alerts

Sub-menu: /ip dhcp-server alert


To find any rogue DHCP servers as soon as they appear in your network, DHCP Alert tool can be used. It will monitor ethernet for all DHCP replies and check, whether this reply comes from a valid DHCP server. If reply from unknown DHCP server is detected, alert gets triggered:

[admin@MikroTik] ip dhcp-server alert>/log print
00:34:23 dhcp,critical,error,warning,info,debug dhcp alert on Public:
    discovered unknown dhcp server, mac 00:02:29:60:36:E7, ip 10.5.8.236
[admin@MikroTik] ip dhcp-server alert>

When the system alerts about a rogue DHCP server, it can execute a custom script.

As DHCP replies can be unicast, rogue dhcp detector may not receive any offer to other dhcp clients at all. To deal with this, rogue dhcp detector acts as a dhcp client as well - it sends out dhcp discover requests once a minute

Properties

Property Description
alert-timeout (none | time; Default: none) Time, after which alert will be forgotten. If after that time the same server will be detected, new alert will be generated. If set to none timeout will never expire.
interface (string; Default: ) Interface, on which to run rogue DHCP server finder.
on-alert (string; Default: ) Script to run, when an unknown DHCP server is detected.
valid-server (string; Default: ) List of MAC addresses of valid DHCP servers.


Read only properties

Property Description
unknown-server (string) List of MAC addresses of detected unknown DHCP servers. Server is removed from this list after alert-timeout


Menu specific commands

Property Description
reset-alert (id) Clear all alerts on an interface

DHCP Options

Sub-menu: /ip dhcp-server option


With help of DHCP Option list, it is possible to define additional custom options for DHCP Server to advertise.

According to the DHCP protocol, a parameter is returned to the DHCP client only if it requests this parameter, specifying the respective code in DHCP request Parameter-List (code 55) attribute. If the code is not included in Parameter-List attribute, DHCP server will not send it to the DHCP client.

Properties

Property Description
code (integer:1..254; Default: ) dhcp option code. All codes are available at http://www.iana.org/assignments/bootp-dhcp-parameters
name (string; Default: ) Descriptive name of the option
value (string; Default: ) Parameter's value in form of a string. If the string begins with "0x", it is assumed as a hexadecimal value

Example

Classless route adds specified route in clients routing table. In our example it will add dst-address=160.0.0.0/24 gateway=10.1.101.1

/ip dhcp-server option
add code=121 name=classless value=0x18A000000A016501000A016501
/ip dhcp-server network
set 0 dhcp-option=classless

Result:

[admin@MikroTik] /ip route> print
Flags: X - disabled, A - active, D - dynamic, C - connect, S - static, r - rip, b - bgp, o - ospf,
m - mme, B - blackhole, U - unreachable, P - prohibit
 #      DST-ADDRESS        PREF-SRC        GATEWAY            DISTANCE
 0 ADS  0.0.0.0/0                          10.1.101.1         0
 1 ADS  160.0.0.0/24                       10.1.101.1         0

Configuration Examples

Enabling IPv6 Prefix delegation

Lets consider that we already have running DHCP server.

To enable IPv6 prefix delegation, first we need to create address pool

/ipv6 pool add name=myPool prefix=2001:db8:7501::/60  prefix-length=62

Notice that prefix-length is 62 bits, it means that clients will receive /62 prefixes from the /60 pool.

Next step is to enable DHCPv6. It is done simply by adding address-pool6 in servers configuration

/ip dhcp-server set myServer address-pool6=myPool


Since RouterOS does not support DHCPv6 client yet, to test our server we will set up wide-dhcpv6 on ubuntu machine:

  • install wide-dhcpv6-client
  • edit "/etc/wide-dhcpv6/dhcp6c.conf" as above
interface eth2{
  send ia-pd 0;
};

id-assoc pd {
   prefix-interface eth3{
   sla-id 1;
   sla-len 2;
   };
};

  • Run DHCPv6 client
sudo dhcp6c -d -D -f eth2
  • Verify that prefix was added to eth3
mrz@bumba:/media/aaa$ ip -6 addr
..
2: eth3: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qlen 1000
    inet6 2001:db8:7501:1:200:ff:fe00:0/64 scope global 
       valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
    inet6 fe80::224:1dff:fe17:81f7/64 scope link 
       valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
  • You can make binding to specific client static, so that it always receives the same prefix
[admin@RB493G] /ip dhcp-server binding6> print 
Flags: X - disabled, D - dynamic 
 #   ADDRESS                                          MAC-ADDRESS       SERVER 
 0 D 2001:db8:7501:1::/62                    00:24:1D:17:81:F7 dhcp1  
[admin@RB493G] /ip dhcp-server binding6> make-static 0

  • DHCPv6 also installs route to assigned prefix into IPv6 routing table
[admin@RB493G] /ipv6 route> print 
Flags: X - disabled, A - active, D - dynamic, C - connect, S - static, r - rip, o - ospf, b - bgp, U - unreachable 
 #      DST-ADDRESS              GATEWAY                  DISTANCE
...
 2 ADS  2001:db8:7501:1::/62     fe80::224:1dff:fe17:8...        1

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