Configuring Multiple DHCP Servers per Subnet
Problem
You want to configure multiple
routers to act as DHCP servers for the same subnet to ensure availability.
Solution
You can configure multiple routers to act as DHCP servers for a
single subnet, by ensuring that they don't use the same pool of addresses.
Here's Router1:
Router1#configure terminal
Enter configuration commands, one per line. End with CNTL/Z.
Router1(config)#ip dhcp pool 172.22.1.0/24
Router1(dhcp-config)#network 172.22.1.0 255.255.255.0
Router1(dhcp-config)#default-router 172.22.1.1
Router1(dhcp-config)#domain-name oreilly.com
Router1(dhcp-config)#dns-server 172.25.1.1 10.1.2.3
Router1(dhcp-config)#exit
Router1(config)#ip dhcp excluded-address 172.22.1.1 172.22.1.49
Router1(config)#ip dhcp excluded-address 172.22.1.150 172.22.1.254
Router1(config)#ip dhcp database ftp://dhcp:bindsave@172.25.1.1/dhcp-leases-rtr1
Router1(config)#end
Router1#
And here's Router2:
Router2#configure terminal
Enter configuration commands, one per line. End with CNTL/Z.
Router2(config)#ip dhcp pool 172.22.1.0/24
Router2(dhcp-config)#network 172.22.1.0 255.255.255.0
Router2(dhcp-config)#default-router 172.22.1.1
Router2(dhcp-config)#domain-name oreilly.com
Router2(dhcp-config)#dns-server 172.25.1.1 10.1.2.3
Router2(dhcp-config)#exit
Router2(config)#ip dhcp excluded-address 172.22.1.1 172.22.1.149
Router2(config)#ip dhcp database ftp://dhcp:bindsave@172.25.1.1/dhcp-leases-rtr2
Router2(config)#end
Router2#
Discussion
You can configure multiple DHCP servers to service the same
subnet; in fact, we recommend it. However, you must take care to ensure that the
two servers do not share the same dynamic pool of IP addresses.
In our example, we chose to let Router1 allocate the
addresses between 172.25.1.50 and 172.25.1.149,
Router2 allocates the pool from 172.25.1.150 to
172.25.1.254, and we reserve the range from 172.25.1.1 to
172.25.1.50 for static IP addresses.
You need to map out the allocated address space ahead of time
and use the ip dhcp excluded-address
configuration command to ensure that there is no overlap. The most critical
thing about this type of configuration is to ensure that the allocated pool of
DHCP addresses on a single router is sufficiently large to handle all of the
DHCP clients on the segment if the other router fails. This way, although the
two routers do not allocate addresses from the same pool, which would cause
problems for the DHCP databases, you still have complete redundancy.
We have also configured the routers to store their DHCP binding
databases to separate files on the same server. For added protection, you could
opt to store the individual database files to different servers.
The rest of the option settings are identical, although they
don't necessarily have to be. You might want to change the name server order,
for instance, to help balance the load between DNS servers.
See Also