From 068424b26532f3551a81421a9be67ed206e5c11a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: V3n3RiX Date: Wed, 11 Aug 2021 07:02:28 +0100 Subject: gentoo resync : 11.08.2021 --- net-misc/kea/files/kea-dhcp4.conf | 401 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 401 insertions(+) create mode 100644 net-misc/kea/files/kea-dhcp4.conf (limited to 'net-misc/kea/files/kea-dhcp4.conf') diff --git a/net-misc/kea/files/kea-dhcp4.conf b/net-misc/kea/files/kea-dhcp4.conf new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..5baec4da9e0a --- /dev/null +++ b/net-misc/kea/files/kea-dhcp4.conf @@ -0,0 +1,401 @@ +{ +// DHCPv4 configuration starts here. This section will be read by DHCPv4 server +// and will be ignored by other components. +"Dhcp4": { + // Add names of your network interfaces to listen on. + "interfaces-config": { + // See section 8.2.4 for more details. You probably want to add just + // interface name (e.g. "eth0" or specific IPv4 address on that + // interface name (e.g. "eth0/192.0.2.1"). + "interfaces": [ ] + + // Kea DHCPv4 server by default listens using raw sockets. This ensures + // all packets, including those sent by directly connected clients + // that don't have IPv4 address yet, are received. However, if your + // traffic is always relayed, it is often better to use regular + // UDP sockets. If you want to do that, uncomment this line: + // "dhcp-socket-type": "udp" + }, + + // Kea supports control channel, which is a way to receive management + // commands while the server is running. This is a Unix domain socket that + // receives commands formatted in JSON, e.g. config-set (which sets new + // configuration), config-reload (which tells Kea to reload its + // configuration from file), statistic-get (to retrieve statistics) and many + // more. For detailed description, see Sections 8.8, 16 and 15. + "control-socket": { + "socket-type": "unix", + "socket-name": "/run/kea/kea4-ctrl-socket" + }, + + // Use Memfile lease database backend to store leases in a CSV file. + // Depending on how Kea was compiled, it may also support SQL databases + // (MySQL and/or PostgreSQL) and even Cassandra. Those database backends + // require more parameters, like name, host and possibly user and password. + // There are dedicated examples for each backend. See Section 7.2.2 "Lease + // Storage" for details. + "lease-database": { + // Memfile is the simplest and easiest backend to use. It's an in-memory + // C++ database that stores its state in CSV file. + "type": "memfile", + "lfc-interval": 3600 + }, + + // Kea allows storing host reservations in a database. If your network is + // small or you have few reservations, it's probably easier to keep them + // in the configuration file. If your network is large, it's usually better + // to use database for it. To enable it, uncomment the following: + // "hosts-database": { + // "type": "mysql", + // "name": "kea", + // "user": "kea", + // "password": "kea", + // "host": "localhost", + // "port": 3306 + // }, + // See Section 7.2.3 "Hosts storage" for details. + + // Setup reclamation of the expired leases and leases affinity. + // Expired leases will be reclaimed every 10 seconds. Every 25 + // seconds reclaimed leases, which have expired more than 3600 + // seconds ago, will be removed. The limits for leases reclamation + // are 100 leases or 250 ms for a single cycle. A warning message + // will be logged if there are still expired leases in the + // database after 5 consecutive reclamation cycles. + "expired-leases-processing": { + "reclaim-timer-wait-time": 10, + "flush-reclaimed-timer-wait-time": 25, + "hold-reclaimed-time": 3600, + "max-reclaim-leases": 100, + "max-reclaim-time": 250, + "unwarned-reclaim-cycles": 5 + }, + + // Global timers specified here apply to all subnets, unless there are + // subnet specific values defined in particular subnets. + "renew-timer": 900, + "rebind-timer": 1800, + "valid-lifetime": 3600, + + // Many additional parameters can be specified here: + // - option definitions (if you want to define vendor options, your own + // custom options or perhaps handle standard options + // that Kea does not support out of the box yet) + // - client classes + // - hooks + // - ddns information (how the DHCPv4 component can reach a DDNS daemon) + // + // Some of them have examples below, but there are other parameters. + // Consult Kea User's Guide to find out about them. + + // These are global options. They are going to be sent when a client + // requests them, unless overwritten with values in more specific scopes. + // The scope hierarchy is: + // - global (most generic, can be overwritten by class, subnet or host) + // - class (can be overwritten by subnet or host) + // - subnet (can be overwritten by host) + // - host (most specific, overwrites any other scopes) + // + // Not all of those options make sense. Please configure only those that + // are actually useful in your network. + // + // For a complete list of options currently supported by Kea, see + // Section 7.2.8 "Standard DHCPv4 Options". Kea also supports + // vendor options (see Section 7.2.10) and allows users to define their + // own custom options (see Section 7.2.9). + "option-data": [ + // When specifying options, you typically need to specify + // one of (name or code) and data. The full option specification + // covers name, code, space, csv-format and data. + // space defaults to "dhcp4" which is usually correct, unless you + // use encapsulate options. csv-format defaults to "true", so + // this is also correct, unless you want to specify the whole + // option value as long hex string. For example, to specify + // domain-name-servers you could do this: + // { + // "name": "domain-name-servers", + // "code": 6, + // "csv-format": "true", + // "space": "dhcp4", + // "data": "192.0.2.1, 192.0.2.2" + // } + // but it's a lot of writing, so it's easier to do this instead: + { + "name": "domain-name-servers", + "data": "192.0.2.1, 192.0.2.2" + }, + + // Typically people prefer to refer to options by their names, so they + // don't need to remember the code names. However, some people like + // to use numerical values. For example, option "domain-name" uses + // option code 15, so you can reference to it either by + // "name": "domain-name" or "code": 15. + { + "code": 15, + "data": "example.org" + }, + + // Domain search is also a popular option. It tells the client to + // attempt to resolve names within those specified domains. For + // example, name "foo" would be attempted to be resolved as + // foo.mydomain.example.com and if it fails, then as foo.example.com + { + "name": "domain-search", + "data": "mydomain.example.com, example.com" + }, + + // String options that have a comma in their values need to have + // it escaped (i.e. each comma is preceded by two backslashes). + // That's because commas are reserved for separating fields in + // compound options. At the same time, we need to be conformant + // with JSON spec, that does not allow "\,". Therefore the + // slightly uncommon double backslashes notation is needed. + + // Legal JSON escapes are \ followed by "\/bfnrt character + // or \u followed by 4 hexadecimal numbers (currently Kea + // supports only \u0000 to \u00ff code points). + // CSV processing translates '\\' into '\' and '\,' into ',' + // only so for instance '\x' is translated into '\x'. But + // as it works on a JSON string value each of these '\' + // characters must be doubled on JSON input. + { + "name": "boot-file-name", + "data": "EST5EDT4\\,M3.2.0/02:00\\,M11.1.0/02:00" + }, + + // Options that take integer values can either be specified in + // dec or hex format. Hex format could be either plain (e.g. abcd) + // or prefixed with 0x (e.g. 0xabcd). + { + "name": "default-ip-ttl", + "data": "0xf0" + } + + // Note that Kea provides some of the options on its own. In particular, + // it sends IP Address lease type (code 51, based on valid-lifetime + // parameter, Subnet mask (code 1, based on subnet definition), Renewal + // time (code 58, based on renew-timer parameter), Rebind time (code 59, + // based on rebind-timer parameter). + ], + + // Other global parameters that can be defined here are option definitions + // (this is useful if you want to use vendor options, your own custom + // options or perhaps handle options that Kea does not handle out of the box + // yet). + + // You can also define classes. If classes are defined, incoming packets + // may be assigned to specific classes. A client class can represent any + // group of devices that share some common characteristic, e.g. Windows + // devices, iphones, broken printers that require special options, etc. + // Based on the class information, you can then allow or reject clients + // to use certain subnets, add special options for them or change values + // of some fixed fields. + "client-classes": [ + { + // This specifies a name of this class. It's useful if you need to + // reference this class. + "name": "voip", + + // This is a test. It is an expression that is being evaluated on + // each incoming packet. It is supposed to evaluate to either + // true or false. If it's true, the packet is added to specified + // class. See Section 12 for a list of available expressions. There + // are several dozens. Section 8.2.14 for more details for DHCPv4 + // classification and Section 9.2.19 for DHCPv6. + "test": "substring(option[60].hex,0,6) == 'Aastra'", + + // If a client belongs to this class, you can define extra behavior. + // For example, certain fields in DHCPv4 packet will be set to + // certain values. + "next-server": "192.0.2.254", + "server-hostname": "hal9000", + "boot-file-name": "/dev/null" + + // You can also define option values here if you want devices from + // this class to receive special options. + } + ], + + // Below an example of a simple IPv4 subnet declaration. Uncomment to enable + // it. This is a list, denoted with [ ], of structures, each denoted with + // { }. Each structure describes a single subnet and may have several + // parameters. One of those parameters is "pools" that is also a list of + // structures. + "subnet4": [ + { + // This defines the whole subnet. Kea will use this information to + // determine where the clients are connected. This is the whole + // subnet in your network. This is mandatory parameter for each + // subnet. + "subnet": "192.0.2.0/24", + + // Pools define the actual part of your subnet that is governed + // by Kea. Technically this is optional parameter, but it's + // almost always needed for DHCP to do its job. If you omit it, + // clients won't be able to get addresses, unless there are + // host reservations defined for them. + "pools": [ { "pool": "192.0.2.1 - 192.0.2.200" } ], + + // These are options that are subnet specific. In most cases, + // you need to define at least routers option, as without this + // option your clients will not be able to reach their default + // gateway and will not have Internet connectivity. + "option-data": [ + { + // For each IPv4 subnet you most likely need to specify at + // least one router. + "name": "routers", + "data": "192.0.2.1" + } + ], + + // Kea offers host reservations mechanism. Kea supports reservations + // by several different types of identifiers: hw-address + // (hardware/MAC address of the client), duid (DUID inserted by the + // client), client-id (client identifier inserted by the client) and + // circuit-id (circuit identifier inserted by the relay agent). + // + // Kea also support flexible identifier (flex-id), which lets you + // specify an expression that is evaluated for each incoming packet. + // Resulting value is then used for as an identifier. + // + // Note that reservations are subnet-specific in Kea. This is + // different than ISC DHCP. Keep that in mind when migrating + // your configurations. + "reservations": [ + + // This is a reservation for a specific hardware/MAC address. + // It's a rather simple reservation: just an address and nothing + // else. + { + "hw-address": "1a:1b:1c:1d:1e:1f", + "ip-address": "192.0.2.201" + }, + + // This is a reservation for a specific client-id. It also shows + // the this client will get a reserved hostname. A hostname can + // be defined for any identifier type, not just client-id. + { + "client-id": "01:11:22:33:44:55:66", + "ip-address": "192.0.2.202", + "hostname": "special-snowflake" + }, + + // The third reservation is based on DUID. This reservation defines + // a special option values for this particular client. If the + // domain-name-servers option would have been defined on a global, + // subnet or class level, the host specific values take preference. + { + "duid": "01:02:03:04:05", + "ip-address": "192.0.2.203", + "option-data": [ { + "name": "domain-name-servers", + "data": "10.1.1.202, 10.1.1.203" + } ] + }, + + // The fourth reservation is based on circuit-id. This is an option + // inserted by the relay agent that forwards the packet from client + // to the server. In this example the host is also assigned vendor + // specific options. + // + // When using reservations, it is useful to configure + // reservations-global, reservations-in-subnet, + // reservations-out-of-pool (subnet specific parameters) + // and host-reservation-identifiers (global parameter). + { + "client-id": "01:12:23:34:45:56:67", + "ip-address": "192.0.2.204", + "option-data": [ + { + "name": "vivso-suboptions", + "data": "4491" + }, + { + "name": "tftp-servers", + "space": "vendor-4491", + "data": "10.1.1.202, 10.1.1.203" + } + ] + }, + // This reservation is for a client that needs specific DHCPv4 + // fields to be set. Three supported fields are next-server, + // server-hostname and boot-file-name + { + "client-id": "01:0a:0b:0c:0d:0e:0f", + "ip-address": "192.0.2.205", + "next-server": "192.0.2.1", + "server-hostname": "hal9000", + "boot-file-name": "/dev/null" + }, + // This reservation is using flexible identifier. Instead of + // relying on specific field, sysadmin can define an expression + // similar to what is used for client classification, + // e.g. substring(relay[0].option[17],0,6). Then, based on the + // value of that expression for incoming packet, the reservation + // is matched. Expression can be specified either as hex or + // plain text using single quotes. + // + // Note: flexible identifier requires flex_id hook library to be + // loaded to work. + { + "flex-id": "'s0mEVaLue'", + "ip-address": "192.0.2.206" + } + // You can add more reservations here. + ] + // You can add more subnets there. + } + ], + + // There are many, many more parameters that DHCPv4 server is able to use. + // They were not added here to not overwhelm people with too much + // information at once. + + // Logging configuration starts here. Kea uses different loggers to log various + // activities. For details (e.g. names of loggers), see Chapter 18. + "loggers": [ + { + // This section affects kea-dhcp4, which is the base logger for DHCPv4 + // component. It tells DHCPv4 server to write all log messages (on + // severity INFO or more) to a file. + "name": "kea-dhcp4", + "output_options": [ + { + // Specifies the output file. There are several special values + // supported: + // - stdout (prints on standard output) + // - stderr (prints on standard error) + // - syslog (logs to syslog) + // - syslog:name (logs to syslog using specified name) + // Any other value is considered a name of the file + "output": "@localstatedir@/log/kea-dhcp4.log" + + // Shorter log pattern suitable for use with systemd, + // avoids redundant information + // "pattern": "%-5p %m\n" + + // This governs whether the log output is flushed to disk after + // every write. + // "flush": false, + + // This specifies the maximum size of the file before it is + // rotated. + // "maxsize": 1048576, + + // This specifies the maximum number of rotated files to keep. + // "maxver": 8 + } + ], + // This specifies the severity of log messages to keep. Supported values + // are: FATAL, ERROR, WARN, INFO, DEBUG + "severity": "INFO", + + // If DEBUG level is specified, this value is used. 0 is least verbose, + // 99 is most verbose. Be cautious, Kea can generate lots and lots + // of logs if told to do so. + "debuglevel": 0 + } + ] +} +} -- cgit v1.2.3