
Chapter 9
| General Security Measures
DHCPv4 Snooping
– 318 –
Command Usage
◆
A trusted interface is an interface that is configured to receive only messages
from within the network. An untrusted interface is an interface that is
configured to receive messages from outside the network or fire wall.
◆
Set all ports connected to DHCP servers within the local network or fire wall to
trusted, and all other ports outside the local network or fire wall to untrusted.
◆
When DHCP snooping is enabled globally using the
command, and enabled on a VLAN with
command,
DHCP packet filtering will be performed on any untrusted ports within the
VLAN according to the default status, or as specifically configured for an
interface with the
no ip dhcp snooping trust
command.
◆
When an untrusted port is changed to a trusted port, all the dynamic DHCP
snooping bindings associated with this port are removed.
◆
Additional considerations when the switch itself is a DHCP client
– The port(s)
through which it submits a client request to the DHCP server must be
configured as trusted.
Example
This example sets port 5 to untrusted.
Console(config)#interface ethernet 1/5
Console(config-if)#no ip dhcp snooping trust
Console(config-if)#
Related Commands
ip dhcp snooping (306)
ip dhcp snooping vlan (314)
clear ip dhcp
snooping binding
This command clears DHCP snooping binding table entries from RAM. Use this
command without any optional keywords to clear all entries from the binding
table.
Syntax
clear ip dhcp snooping binding
[
mac-address
vlan
vlan-id
]
mac-address
- Specifies a MAC address entry.
(Format: xx-xx-xx-xx-xx-xx)
vlan-id
- ID of a configured VLAN (Range: 1-4094)
Command Mode
Privileged Exec
Summary of Contents for ECS4120-28F
Page 36: ...Contents 36...
Page 38: ...Figures 38...
Page 46: ...Section I Getting Started 46...
Page 70: ...Chapter 1 Initial Switch Configuration Setting the System Clock 70...
Page 86: ...Chapter 2 Using the Command Line Interface CLI Command Groups 86...
Page 202: ...Chapter 5 SNMP Commands Additional Trap Commands 202...
Page 210: ...Chapter 6 Remote Monitoring Commands 210...
Page 216: ...Chapter 7 Flow Sampling Commands 216...
Page 278: ...Chapter 8 Authentication Commands PPPoE Intermediate Agent 278...
Page 360: ...Chapter 9 General Security Measures Port based Traffic Segmentation 360...
Page 384: ...Chapter 10 Access Control Lists ACL Information 384...
Page 424: ...Chapter 11 Interface Commands Power Savings 424...
Page 446: ...Chapter 13 Power over Ethernet Commands 446...
Page 456: ...Chapter 14 Port Mirroring Commands RSPAN Mirroring Commands 456...
Page 488: ...Chapter 17 UniDirectional Link Detection Commands 488...
Page 494: ...Chapter 18 Address Table Commands 494...
Page 554: ...Chapter 20 ERPS Commands 554...
Page 620: ...Chapter 22 Class of Service Commands Priority Commands Layer 3 and 4 620...
Page 638: ...Chapter 23 Quality of Service Commands 638...
Page 772: ...Chapter 25 LLDP Commands 772...
Page 814: ...Chapter 26 CFM Commands Delay Measure Operations 814...
Page 836: ...Chapter 28 Domain Name Service Commands 836...
Page 848: ...Chapter 29 DHCP Commands DHCP Relay Option 82 848...
Page 902: ...Section III Appendices 902...
Page 916: ...Glossary 916...
Page 926: ...CLI Commands 926...
Page 937: ......
Page 938: ...E092017 CS R02...