Yes. The client will renew the same address lease for as long as the DHCP server allows.
Using NAT a computer fails to locate a DHCP server . NAT is method that provide mapping between private and universal addresses. Network address translation also supports VPN .
Using NAT a computer fails to locate a DHCP server . NAT is method that provide mapping between private and universal addresses. Network address translation also supports VPN .
Yes. There are a number of ways this can (and in fact does) happen. The most obvious happens in a DHCP request, which is a method by which a computer that does not have an IP address gets an IP address from a DHCP server.
DHCP server must be assigned a static IP address...On a Windows computer you can find out the IP address of the DHCP server that assigned your current IP address by opening a command prompt and typing "ipconfig /all".
DHCP s just a server that provides IP details to a computer. Since it can be set up to give statc IP address details to specific computers it has no disadvantage....unless of course the DHCP server crashes.
DHCP
Nothing. That is not a valid IP address as its stands however ip addresses with the first 2 octets of 169.254.xxx.xxx means that Automatic Private IP Addressing has been enabled because no DHCP server was found and no static address has been defined.
A dynamic address, assigned by the DHCP server. Static addresses can also be assigned by the DHCP server through reservations using the unique MAC addresses to identify each machine. This ensures a machine receives the same address each time it requests an address from the server.
The same as a public IP. Your choices are: (1) assign an address manually, and (2) configure the computer to get an IP address automatically from a DHCP server.The same as a public IP. Your choices are: (1) assign an address manually, and (2) configure the computer to get an IP address automatically from a DHCP server.The same as a public IP. Your choices are: (1) assign an address manually, and (2) configure the computer to get an IP address automatically from a DHCP server.The same as a public IP. Your choices are: (1) assign an address manually, and (2) configure the computer to get an IP address automatically from a DHCP server.
The IP address is obtained automatically using the DHCP protocol
You haven't indicated what operating system you are using. For windows, using the 'ipconfig /all' command will show you what the DHCP server address is.
The client