Denial of Service Protection
ExtremeWare XOS 11.1 Concepts Guide
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The following commands allow you to configure the server. To configure the range of IP addresses
assigned by the DHCP server, use the following command:
configure vlan <vlan_name> dhcp-address-range <ipaddress1> - <ipaddress2>
To remove the address range information, use the following command:
unconfigure vlan <vlan_name> dhcp-address-range
To set how long the IP address lease assigned by the server exists, use the following command:
configure vlan <vlan_name> dhcp-lease-timer <lease-timer>
To set the default gateway, Domain Name Servers (DNS) addresses, or Windows Internet Naming
Service (WINS) server, use the following command:
configure vlan <vlan_name> dhcp-options [default-gateway | dns-server | wins-server]
<ipaddress>
To remove the default gateway, DNS server addresses, and WINS server information for a particular
VLAN, use the following command:
unconfigure vlan <vlan_name> dhcp-options
To remove all the DHCP information for a particular VLAN, use the following command:
unconfigure vlan <vlan_name> dhcp
You can clear the DHCP address allocation table selected entries, or all entries. You would use this
command to troubleshoot IP address allocation on the VLAN. To clear entries, use the following
command:
clear vlan <vlan_name> dhcp-address-allocation [[all {offered | assigned | declined |
expired}] | <ipaddress>]
Displaying DHCP Information
To display the DHCP configuration, including the DHCP range, DHCP lease timer, network login lease
timer, DHCP-enabled ports, IP address, MAC address, and time assigned to each end device, use the
following command:
show dhcp-server {vlan <vlan_name>}
The next two commands were retained for compatibility with earlier versions of ExtremeWare. To view
only the address allocation of the DHCP server on a VLAN, use the following command:
show vlan <vlan_name> dhcp-address-allocation
To view only the configuration of the DHCP server on a VLAN, use the following command:
show vlan <vlan_name> dhcp-config
Denial of Service Protection
A Denial-of-Service (DoS) attack occurs when a critical network or computing resource is overwhelmed
and rendered inoperative in a way that legitimate requests for service cannot succeed. In its simplest
form, a Denial of Service attack is indistinguishable from normal heavy traffic. Extreme Network
switches are not vulnerable to this simple attack because they are all designed to process packets in
Summary of Contents for ExtremeWare XOS 11.1
Page 16: ...Contents ExtremeWare XOS 11 1 Concepts Guide 16...
Page 20: ...Preface ExtremeWare XOS 11 1 Concepts Guide 20...
Page 21: ...1 Using ExtremeWare XOS...
Page 22: ......
Page 78: ...Managing the ExtremeWare XOS Software ExtremeWare XOS 11 1 Concepts Guide 78...
Page 168: ...Virtual LANs ExtremeWare XOS 11 1 Concepts Guide 168...
Page 200: ...Policies and ACLs ExtremeWare XOS 11 1 Concepts Guide 200...
Page 252: ...Security ExtremeWare XOS 11 1 Concepts Guide 252...
Page 265: ...2 Using Switching and Routing Protocols...
Page 266: ......
Page 294: ...Ethernet Automatic Protection Switching ExtremeWare XOS 11 1 Concepts Guide 294...
Page 354: ...Extreme Standby Router Protocol ExtremeWare XOS 11 1 Concepts Guide 354...
Page 416: ...IP Multicast Routing ExtremeWare XOS 11 1 Concepts Guide 416...
Page 417: ...3 Appendixes...
Page 418: ......
Page 432: ...Software Upgrade and Boot Options ExtremeWare XOS 11 1 Concepts Guide 432...