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dhcp-helper

This DHCP relay agent is originally written by Simon Kelley [email protected]

DHCP Relay Agents are commonly used on routed networks with centralized DHCP services. The relay agent is a service that is typically configured on a router and converts DHCP broadcasts into unicast messages directed at the DHCP servers IP address.

dhcp-helper listens for DHCP and BOOTP broadcasts on configured interfaces and relays them to DHCP or BOOTP servers elsewhere. It also relays replies from the remote servers back to the configured hosts. Once hosts are fully configured they can communicate directly with their servers and no longer need the services of a relay.

dhcp-helper is optimized to run on a VLAN aware bridge, but work as well for a much simpler use case (see simple.json). If running with a bridge nftables is required (kernel support and userspace binary). This to stop DHCP packets that's already processed by the relay agent to be forwarded by the bridge.

dhcp-helper requires a configuration file to operate correctly (default read from /etc/dhcphelper.json or specified via the -f option). The simplest configuration look like this:

{
    "server": [
        {
            "address": "198.19.10.2"
        }],
    "groups": [
        {
            "giaddr": "198.19.20.1"
        }
    ]
}

This configuration will listen for DHCP request on the local interface which has the IP address 198.19.20.1. An incoming DHCP request will then be relayed to a DHCP server at IP address 198.19.10.2.

Building

Requirements on an Ubuntu 16.04 system:

apt-get install libnl-3-dev libnl-route-3-dev libnl-genl-3-dev libjansson-dev libev-dev

Build dhcp-helper:

./configure && make && make install

Configuration

simple.json - A very simple case where you only run the relay agent on one interface and no bridge. bridged.json - More advanced case with multiple servers and running on a VLAN aware bridge.

Configuration file

option82 - Should option 82 be enabled, optional

  • remote-id - remote ID settings, optional
    • type - remote id type can either be manual string or hex values, hostname or giaddr
    • data - only applicable when using manual

servers - array of servers, optional

  • address - IPv4 address of server, required
  • port - TCP port for the server, optional (default port 67)

groups - array of objects, required

  • giaddr - Local address to use when communicate with server, required
  • ifname - interface to broadcast answers to, if not specified it is the interface with giaddr, optional
  • ifaces - array of objects, optional
    • ifname - the name of the interface, required
    • circuit-id - value to send to the server, see String or hex values
    • server - object of objects, optional if specified globally, override global configured servers
      • address - Where to send, required
      • port - TCP port for the server, optional (default port 67)

String or hex values

Circuit-id and remote-id can be entered as hex values as well as string.

As raw hex values:

    "option82": {
        "remote-id": {
            "type": "manual",
            "data": [
                "0x5a",
                "0x5a",
                "0x5a",
                "0x5a"
            ]
        }
    },

as a string:

    "option82": {
        "remote-id": {
            "type": "manual",
            "data": "test"
        }
    },

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