Chapter 12
| Security Measures
DHCP Snooping
– 301 –
■
If a DHCP packet from a client passes the filtering criteria above, it will only
be forwarded to trusted ports in the same VLAN.
■
If a DHCP packet is from server is received on a trusted port, it will be
forwarded to both trusted and untrusted ports in the same VLAN.
■
If the DHCP snooping is globally disabled, all dynamic bindings are
removed from the binding table.
■
Additional considerations when the switch itself is a DHCP client
– The port(s)
through which the switch submits a client request to the DHCP server must
be configured as trusted. Note that the switch will not add a dynamic entry
for itself to the binding table when it receives an ACK message from a DHCP
server. Also, when the switch sends out DHCP client packets for itself, no
filtering takes place. However, when the switch receives any messages from
a DHCP server, any packets received from untrusted ports are dropped.
DHCP Snooping Option 82
◆
DHCP provides a relay mechanism for sending information about its DHCP
clients or the relay agent itself to the DHCP server. Also known as DHCP Option
82, it allows compatible DHCP servers to use the information when assigning IP
addresses, or to set other services or policies for clients. It is also an effective
tool in preventing malicious network attacks from attached clients on DHCP
services, such as IP Spoofing, Client Identifier Spoofing, MAC Address Spoofing,
and Address Exhaustion.
◆
DHCP Snooping must be enabled for Option 82 information to be inserted into
request packets.
◆
When the DHCP Snooping Information Option 82 is enabled, the requesting
client (or an intermediate relay agent that has used the information fields to
describe itself ) can be identified in the DHCP request packets forwarded by the
switch and in reply packets sent back from the DHCP server. This information
may specify the MAC address or IP address of the requesting device (that is, the
switch in this context).
By default, the switch also fills in the Option 82 circuit-id field with information
indicating the local interface over which the switch received the DHCP client
request, including the port and VLAN ID. This allows DHCP client-server
exchange messages to be forwarded between the server and client without
having to flood them to the entire VLAN.
◆
If DHCP Snooping Information Option 82 is enabled on the switch, information
may be inserted into a DHCP request packet received over any VLAN
(depending on DHCP snooping filtering rules). The information inserted into
the relayed packets includes the circuit-id and remote-id, as well as the
gateway Internet address.
◆
When the switch receives DHCP packets from clients that already include DHCP
Option 82 information, the switch can be configured to set the action policy for
Summary of Contents for GEL-1061
Page 14: ...Contents 14...
Page 28: ...Section I Getting Started 28...
Page 38: ...Chapter 1 Introduction System Defaults 38...
Page 40: ...Section II Web Configuration 40...
Page 60: ...Chapter 2 Using the Web Interface Navigating the Web Browser Interface 60...
Page 164: ...Chapter 6 Address Table Settings Issuing MAC Address Traps 164...
Page 192: ...Chapter 8 Congestion Control Storm Control 192...
Page 204: ...Chapter 9 Class of Service Layer 3 4 Priority Settings 204...
Page 216: ...Chapter 10 Quality of Service Attaching a Policy Map to a Port 216...
Page 430: ...Chapter 14 Multicast Filtering MLD Snooping Snooping and Query for IPv4 430...
Page 436: ...Chapter 15 IP Tools Address Resolution Protocol 436...
Page 474: ...Section III Appendices 474...
Page 492: ...Glossary 492...
Page 500: ...E052016 ST R02 150200001416A...