On Aug 1, 2011, at 10:26 PM, Neal Zimmermann wrote:

> On Sun, 2011-07-31 at 22:03 -0500, Robert Nesius wrote:
>> On Sat, Jul 30, 2011 at 6:19 PM, Tony Yarusso <tonyyarusso at gmail.com> wrote:
>> 
>>> DNS does not assign addresses - DHCP does.
>> 
>> 
>> He can assign the address in DNS as long as he sets the ip address
>> statically on the client.
>> 
>> Perhaps I'm just being pedantic. :)  I tend to prefer DHCP reservations
>> myself.
>> 
>> -Rob
>> 
>> 
>>> You need to add two things
>>> to your dhcpd.conf.  First, tell it that 164 is an exception to the
>>> pool range (so it doesn't try to hand that out to any other machines).
>>> Then, tell it to always give 164 to the machine with a MAC address
>>> matching that of the client in question (a "static lease").
>>> 
>>> - Tony Yarusso
> 
> Tony is right, I needed DHCP to set the addresses on the clients.  What
> I am trying to do is to let the computers here to get their addresses 
> via an automated process.  The static addresses are needed to let nfs
> securely attach.  I still need to set the DNS server addresses
> manually at each client - that is the next nut to crack.

Why? You can't get that running with your DHCP server? ISC supports it quite easily.
"  option domain-name-servers 10.1.0.12 8.8.8.8;"


> I got DHCP to do that (verifying each machine by it's mac).  Now I would
> like (need) to get the caching DNS working.  That may speed up
> connecting to the internet sites that I am interested in.
> 
> Well, a deep breath here and back into the fray.
> 
> tayl
> 
> Neal

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