-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 4
DHCPStatus is a query tool for browsing information stored in DHCPD's configuration and leases files.
License
mattrude/DHCPStatus
Folders and files
Name | Name | Last commit message | Last commit date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Repository files navigation
DHCPStatus What is DHCPStatus ? ==================== DHCPStatus is a query tool for browsing information stored in DHCPD's configuration and leases files, dhcpd.conf and dhcpd.leases. It correlates the subnet details that you configure in the conf file with the lease records that DHCPD maintains in its lease file. You can thus obtain an overall picture of your DHCP environment, as well as view details of individual leases for each IP. DHCPD, by the way, is a DHCP server daemon, produced by the Internet Software Consortium. DHCPStatus can be run either as a CGI script and viewed via a web browser, or as a command-line tool that generates simple text output. The CGI/web interface requires that you run a CGI-capable web server on your DHCPD server machine. The command-line tool merely requires that you have a shell login on the server. What information does DHCPStatus give you ? =========================================== DHCPStatus provides information about your DHCPD environment at two levels: an overall summary report, and a subnet detail report. Summary report. --------------- Each row of the summary report contains information for a single subnet defined in the dhcpd.conf file. The information described for each subnet is: - the subnet address - netmask - the range of IP addresses that fall within the subnet - the router(s) for the subnet - the number of IP addresses that are defined in the dynamic pool for that subnet - the number of IP addresses in the dynamic pool that are in use - and the number of IP addresses in the dynamic pool that are free All this information is obtained from the dhcpd.conf and dhcpd.leases files, in their standard formats. In addition, if you use an extra format standard for commenting each subnet in your dhcpd.conf file, this utility will find those comments and include them as a "Location" field in the summary report. Subnet detail report. --------------------- For each subnet that is summarised by the summary report, it is possible to obtained a detailed subnet report. The information displayed in the subnet detail report includes all of the information that is produced by the summary report for that subnet, as well as a row of information on each IP address in the subnet. The information for each IP address includes the lease status ("active", "free", or blank for IP addresses not in the dynamic pool). For each active IP address, the following is displayed: - the start date of the lease - the end date of the lease - the mac address of the interface that has the IP address lease - the DNS name of the interface that has the lease (as supplied by the client) - and the hostname (or WINS name, assuming the client is using WINS) of the machine that has the lease. Overall, these two reports provide a quick and easy way of summarising the status of your DHCPD server (a lot easier than scanning through the dhcpd.leases file manually :-) Requirements. ============= If you want to use DHCPStatus, you'll firstly need read access to your dhcpd.conf and dhcpd.leases files. You'll also require Perl 5.003 (or later) installed on your system. If you choose to run the CGI/web interface with DHCPStatus, then you'll need to run a web server on your DHCPD server. The userid that the web server runs as will need read access to your dhcpd.conf and dhcpd.leases files. Alternatively, if you want to use the web interface but don't want to install a web server on your DHCPD server, then you could run the CGI script from another machine that had access to the dhcpd.conf and dhcpd.leases files via, say, an NFS mount. There are no pre-requisites for the command-line interface to DHCPStatus (other than, obviously, Perl and read access to your DHCPD files). The command-line version assumes that your terminal display width is 80 characters (you can easily change this width value in a .ini file). However, if you have the Perl Term::ReadKey package installed on your system, DHCPStatus will use it to determine your screen width (see http://search.cpan.org/search?dist=TermReadKey). Installation. ============= See the INSTALL file. License. ======== DHCPStatus is freely available under the terms of the GNU General Public License. However, if you find this product useful and wish to offer appreciation for it, then please make a contribution to your local animal welfare society. The Author. =========== DHCPStatus was written by Michael Grubits. Please send all criticism/praise/patches/change requests/offers of telecommuting employment/etc. to [email protected].
About
DHCPStatus is a query tool for browsing information stored in DHCPD's configuration and leases files.
Resources
License
Stars
Watchers
Forks
Packages 0
No packages published