ref: 84989770721391018dd6a247831cb79a43c1d86b
dir: /man/2/dhcpclient/
.TH DHCPCLIENT 2 .SH NAME Dhcpclient: Bootconf, Lease, bootp, dhcp, applycfg, removecfg \- client's side of dynamic host configuration protocol .SH SYNOPSIS .EX include "dhcp.m"; # sic dhcpclient := load Dhcpclient Dhcpclient->PATH; Bootconf, Lease: import dhcpclient; Bootconf: adt { ip: string; ipgw: string; ipmask: string; bootf: string; bootip: string; dhcpip: string; siaddr: string; serverid: string; sys: string; dom: string; lease: int; options: array of array of byte; vendor: array of array of byte; new: fn(): ref Bootconf; get: fn(c: self ref Bootconf, n: int): array of byte; getint: fn(c: self ref Bootconf, n: int): int; getip: fn(c: self ref Bootconf, n: int): string; getips: fn(c: self ref Bootconf, n: int): list of string; gets: fn(c: self ref Bootconf, n: int): string; put: fn(c: self ref Bootconf, n: int, a: array of byte); putint: fn(c: self ref Bootconf, n: int, v: int); putips: fn(c: self ref Bootconf, n: int, ips: list of string); puts: fn(c: self ref Bootconf, n: int, s: string); }; Lease: adt { configs: chan of (ref Bootconf, string); release: fn(l: self ref Lease); }; init: fn(); tracing: fn(debug: int); bootp: fn(net: string, ctlifc: ref Sys->FD, device: string, init: ref Bootconf): (ref Bootconf, string); dhcp: fn(net: string, ctlifc: ref Sys->FD, device: string, init: ref Bootconf, options: array of int): (ref Bootconf, ref Lease, string); applycfg: fn(net: string, ctlifc: ref Sys->FD, conf: ref Bootconf): string; removecfg: fn(net: string, ctlifc: ref Sys->FD, conf: ref Bootconf): string; .EE .SH DESCRIPTION .B Dhcpclient implements the client side of the Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) of Internet RFC2131. In the interface, Internet addresses are represented as strings, in forms that .IR ip (2) can parse, and that can be written directly to control files in .IR ip (3). .PP .B Init must be called before invoking any other operation of the module. .PP .B Bootp reserves the UDP port on .I net for use by BOOTP/DHCP clients, and sends a BOOTP request (ie, one without a DHCP operation code). .I Net is the name of the network directory (if nil, the default is .BR /net ). If .B bootp is to configure the interface according to the results received, .I ctlifc should be open on the control file of the .IB net /ipifc directory for the interface to be configured; otherwise it should be nil. .B Bootp repeats the request periodically until it either receives a reply or has made 5 attempts. It returns a tuple .BI ( conf,\ err ). If it has received a reply, .I conf refers to a .B Bootconf value that contains the values received, and .I err is nil. If .I ctlifc is not nil, the interface will also have been configured appropriately. If a valid reply has not been received, or some other error occurred, .I conf is nil, and .I err is a diagnostic. .PP .B Dhcp has a similar interface, but runs the full DHCP protocol. The .I options array has integers representing possible DHCP options; .B dhcp asks the server to provide values for them. If .I options is nil, a few option values are requested that might be useful for Inferno (eg, subnet mask, gateway, DNS server, authentication and file servers, and so on). If the server does supply them, they can be retrieved either from specific fields of .BR Bootconf , or using its .I get operations. .I Init is also usually nil, but can refer to a .B Bootconf that provides some values to suggest to the server, for instance if the client knows a previously-assigned address stored in non-volatile memory. .B Dhcp returns a tuple .BI ( conf,\ lease,\ err ), where .I conf and .I err are just as for .BR bootp , and the new component .I lease is a reference to a .B Lease value that gives access to the state of the client's address assignment. .PP DHCP allows a server to assign a client an address permanently, or to lease it for a specified time. In the latter case, .B Bootconf.lease will have a non-zero value, and the client must periodically renew the lease to retain the address, and .B dhcp creates a process to do so. The .B Lease value provides a way for that process to communicate changes (if any) to the network configuration. Each time the configuration changes, the process will send a message on the channel .BR configs . (The channel is buffered, and .B dhcp first discards any previous notifications not yet received, so there are no ill effects if no process ever receives from the channel.) Each message is a tuple .BI ( conf,\ diag ). If a new state change has been made successfully, .I conf refers to a .B Bootconf value with the details. Otherwise, .I conf is nil and .I diag explains what went wrong. In any case, the watchdog process continues to try to extend the lease, or failing that, obtain a new network configuration, perhaps from another server. .B Lease.release may be called to release the leased address and stop the watchdog. .PP .B Bootconf has the following operations: .TP .B new() Return a reference to a .B Bootconf with values initialised to nil or 0. .TP .IB bc .get( n ) Return the value of DHCP option .I n as a raw array of bytes. Return nil if the option is not set. .TP .IB bc .getint( n ) Return the value of option .I n interpreted as an integer. Return zero if the option is not set. .TP .IB bc .getip( n ) Return the first Internet address provided for option .IR n . .TP .IB bc .getips( n ) Return a list of all the Internet addresses provided for option .IR n . .TP .IB bc .gets( n ) Return the value of option .I n as a string. .TP .IB bc .put( n,\ a ) Set the value of DHCP option .I n to the bytes of byte array .IR a . If .I a is nil, .B put removes any existing value for the option. .TP .IB bc .putint( n,\ v) Set option .I n to the integer value .IR v . .TP .IB bc .putips( n,\ ips ) Set option .I n to the list of Internet addresses .IR ips . .TP .IB bc .puts( n,\ s ) Set option .I n to the string .IR n . .PP .B Dhcpclient names a few constants representing commonly-used configuration options (attributes). They are suitable parameters for the option selector .I n of .BR Bootconf 's .I get and .I put functions. The first set of constants name options for both BOOTP and DHCP: .PP .PD 0 .TP 25 .B Odnsserver Internet address(es) of Domain Name Servers .TP .B Odomainname Current domain (see .BR Bootconf.dom ) .TP .B Ohostname Host name (see .BR Bootconf.sys ) .TP .B Omask Network mask (IPv4). Also see .BR Bootconf.ipmask . .TP .B Onetbiosns NetBIOS servers .TP .B Ontpserver Network Time Protocol servers .TP .B Opop3server POP3 mail servers .TP .B Orouter Default router for subnet (see .BR Bootconf.ipgw ) .TP .B Osmtpserver SMTP mail delivery servers .TP .B Ovendorinfo Vendor-specific data (see below) .TP .B Owwwserver HTTP proxy .PD .PP The second set has DHCP options: .PP .PD 0 .TP 25 .B Obootfile Name of the file containing a kernel for the client to load (eg, by TFTP); see .BR Bootconf.bootf . .TP .B Olease Lease time for IP address, in seconds (also see .BR Bootconf.lease ) .TP .B Omaxmsg Maximum DHCP size the client is willing to accept (minimum 576 bytes). .TP .B Orebindingtime Time interval in seconds from address assignment to the time address must be rebound. .TP .B Orenewaltime Time interval in seconds from address assignment to first attempt to renew the address. .TP .B Otftpserver TFTP server from which to fetch kernel and parameter files; see .BR Bootconf.bootip . .TP .B Ovendorclass Identify vendor type and configuration of client. Inferno sets this to .B plan9_386 (sic) to encourage Plan 9 DHCP servers to respond; other servers will ignore it. .PD .PP The final set give vendor-specific options that Inferno shares with Plan 9: .PP .PD 0 .TP 25 .B Ovendor Flag OR'd in to an option number to mark it as destined for the `vendor information' section. .TP .B OP9auth Authentication server .RB ( Ovendor|129 ) .TP .B OP9fs File server .RB ( Ovendor|128 ) .PD .PP Given a network configuration in .IR conf , and a valid file descriptor for a network interface's control file, in the network .IR net , .B applycfg sets the basic interface parameters (address, network mask, default gateway), and writes other parameters to .IR net /ndb ; conversely, .B removecfg removes from the interface just those parameters set by .IR conf . Normally these functions are called automatically, as required, by .B dhcp and its watchdog process. .SH SOURCE .B /appl/lib/dhcpclient.b .SH SEE ALSO .IR bootpd (8), .IR dhcp (8)