Reference Guide
The server echoes the option back to the relay agent in its response, and the relay agent can use the
information in the option to forward a reply out the interface on which the request was received rather
than flooding it on the entire VLAN.
The relay agent strips Option 82 from DHCP responses before forwarding them to the client.
To insert Option 82 into DHCP packets, follow this step.
• Insert Option 82 into DHCP packets.
CONFIGURATION mode
ip dhcp relay information-option [trust-downstream]
For routers between the relay agent and the DHCP server, enter the trust-downstream option.
DHCP Snooping
DHCP snooping protects networks from spoofing. In the context of DHCP snooping, ports are either
trusted or not trusted.
By default, all ports are not trusted. Trusted ports are ports through which attackers cannot connect.
Manually configure ports connected to legitimate servers and relay agents as trusted.
When you enable DHCP snooping, the relay agent builds a binding table — using DHCPACK messages —
containing the client MAC address, IP addresses, IP address lease time, port, VLAN ID, and binding type.
Every time the relay agent receives a DHCPACK on a trusted port, it adds an entry to the table.
The relay agent checks all subsequent DHCP client-originated IP traffic (DHCPRELEASE, DHCPNACK, and
DHCPDECLINE) against the binding table to ensure that the MAC-IP address pair is legitimate and that the
packet arrived on the correct port. Packets that do not pass this check are forwarded to the server for
validation. This checkpoint prevents an attacker from spoofing a client and declining or releasing the real
client’s address. Server-originated packets (DHCPOFFER, DHCPACK, and DHCPNACK) that arrive on a not
trusted port are also dropped. This checkpoint prevents an attacker from acting as an impostor as a
DHCP server to facilitate a man-in-the-middle attack.
Binding table entries are deleted when a lease expires, or the relay agent encounters a DHCPRELEASE,
DHCPNACK, or DHCPDECLINE.
NOTE: DHCP server packets are dropped on all not trusted interfaces of a system configured for
DHCP snooping. To prevent these packets from being dropped, configure ip dhcp snooping
trust on the server-connected port.
Enabling DHCP Snooping
To enable DHCP snooping, use the following commands.
1. Enable DHCP snooping globally.
CONFIGURATION mode
ip dhcp snooping
2. Specify ports connected to DHCP servers as trusted.
INTERFACE mode
ip dhcp snooping trust
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Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP)










