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Windows Server 2016 Cookbook

You're reading from   Windows Server 2016 Cookbook Sauté your way through more than 100 hands-on recipes designed to prepare any server administrator to work with Windows Server 2016

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785883835
Length 494 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Jordan Krause Jordan Krause
Author Profile Icon Jordan Krause
Jordan Krause
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Windows Server 2016 Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Learning the Interface FREE CHAPTER 2. Core Infrastructure Tasks 3. Security and Networking 4. Working with Certificates 5. Internet Information Services 6. Remote Access 7. Remote Desktop Services 8. Monitoring and Backup 9. Group Policy 10. File Services and Data Control 11. Nano Server and Server Core 12. Working with Hyper-V

Creating a DHCP scope to assign addresses to computers


In the Configuring a combination Domain Controller, DNS server, and DHCP server recipes, we installed the DHCP role onto a server called DC1. Without some configuration, however, that role isn't doing anything. In most companies that I work with, all of the servers have statically assigned IP addresses, which are IPs entered by hand into the NIC properties. This way, those servers always retain the same IP address. But what about client machines that might move around, or even move in and out of the network? DHCP is a mechanism that the clients can reach out to in order to obtain IP addressing information for the network that they are currently plugged into.

This way, users or admins don't have to worry about configuring IP settings on the client machine, as they are configured automatically by the DHCP server. In order for our DHCP server to hand out IP addresses, we need to configure a scope.

Getting ready

We have a Server 2016 machine...

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