Hi, On Wed, Feb 2, 2011 at 10:38 AM, John Adams <jna@retina.net> wrote:
2011/2/1 Joe <sj_hznm@hotmail.com>:
hi,
we plan to implement DHCP server farm in our network. Currently ,
there are there problems burning my head. could anybody
You're making this way, way too complicated.
Run two DHCP servers. Allocate two different netblocks to each server. For Example, if your network is a /24, allocate a couple of /26's. Both will answer on a request. The client will ack to whatever address it decides to accept. Full redundancy.
Well, it also depends on the constraints: having such a configuration implies that every scope will have to be declared twice, as well as the DHCP options. Plus, if the server who issued the lease is down, the client will get a new DHCP lease - which maybe an issue for some people.
To our experience, this needs to set up DHCP server on two sites
and syncronize their content in real time.
Beside this , we hope there should be as less modification as
possible on edge router when one DHCP server is down.
should anycast architecture helpful ? or should we just set up two
dhcp servers on two sites and sync. with ISC DHCPD?
Don't even bother with the syncing, and anycast is the wrong protocol here.
Agree, anycast makes no sense. ISC DHCPd sync works well, provided you know it and configured it correctly.