On 7/15/2011 2:56 PM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
Timothy Murphy wrote:
Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
and there is no mention of interfaces, just their IP's, and you can only set DHCP service on the first IP on the interface.
What exactly do you mean when you say that "you can only set DHCP service on the first IP on the interface"?
I use ISC DHCP on non-CentOS router. On that router, ISC DHCP will not hand out IP addresses on second (or virtual eth0:0, eth0:1, ...) IP on the interface, just for the subnet original, true IP is set.
Since ISC DHCP should be the same, this should be also true for CentOS version of ISC DHCP server.
Did you use a 'shared-network' declaration? It still isn't going to be able to distinguish which address range to give out to any particular client unless you've specified the hardware ethernet for it, though.