(
Optional) Enable the option to
Send
Hostname to assign a hostname to the DHCP client
interface and send that hostname (
Option 12) to a DHCP server, which can then
register the hostname with the DNS server. The DNS server can then
automatically manage hostname-to-dynamic IP address resolutions.
External hosts can identify the interface by its hostname. The default
value indicates
system-hostname, which is the
firewall hostname that you set in . Alternatively, enter a hostname for the interface, which
can be a maximum of 64 characters, including uppercase and lowercase
letters, numbers, period (.), hyphen (-), and underscore (_).
(
Optional) Enter a
Default Route Metric
(priority level) for the route between the firewall and the DHCP server
(range is 1 to 65,535; default is 10). A route with a lower number has
higher priority during route selection. For example, a route with a
metric of 10 is used before a route with a metric of 100.
The Default Route Metric for the route
between the firewall and the DHCP server is 10 by default. If
the static default route 0.0.0.0/0 uses the DHCP interface as
its egress interface, that route’s default
Metric is also 10. Therefore, there
are two routes with a metric of 10 and the firewall can randomly
choose one of the routes one time and the other route another
time.
Suppose you enable the option to Automatically create
default route pointing to default gateway provided by
server, select a virtual router, add a static
route for a Layer 3 interface, change the
Metric (which defaults to 10) to a
value greater than 10 (for this example, 100) and Commit your
changes. In the route table, the route’s metric will not
indicate 100. Instead, it will indicate the default value of 10,
as expected, because 10 takes precedence over the configured
value of 100. However, if you change the static route’s
Metric to a value less than 10 (such
as 6), the route in the route table is updated to indicate the
configured metric of 6.
(
Optional) Enable the option to
Show DHCP Client
Runtime Info to see all of the settings the client
inherited from its DHCP server.
Commit your changes.
Click OK and Commit.
The Ethernet interface should now indicate Dynamic-DHCP
Client as its IP Address on the
Ethernet tab.
(
Optional) See which interfaces on the firewall are configured as DHCP
clients.
Select and check the
IP Address to see
which interfaces indicate DHCP Client.
Select and check the IP Address to see
which interfaces indicate DHCP Client.