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dhcp-eval(5)		      File Formats Manual		  dhcp-eval(5)

NAME
       dhcp-eval - ISC DHCP conditional	evaluation

DESCRIPTION
       The Internet Systems Consortium DHCP client and server both provide the
       ability	to  perform  conditional behavior depending on the contents of
       packets they receive.  The syntax for specifying	this  conditional  be-
       haviour is documented here.

REFERENCE: CONDITIONAL BEHAVIOUR
       Conditional  behaviour may be  specified	using the if statement and the
       else or elsif statements	or the switch and case statements.   A	condi-
       tional statement	can appear anywhere that a regular statement (e.g., an
       option  statement)  can appear, and can enclose one or more such	state-
       ments.

       CONDITIONAL BEHAVIOUR: IF

       A typical conditional if	statement in a server might be:

       if option dhcp-user-class = "accounting"	{
	 max-lease-time	17600;
	 option	domain-name "accounting.example.org";
	 option	domain-name-servers ns1.accounting.example.org,
			   ns2.accounting.example.org;
       } elsif option dhcp-user-class =	"sales"	{
	 max-lease-time	17600;
	 option	domain-name "sales.example.org";
	 option	domain-name-servers ns1.sales.example.org,
			   ns2.sales.example.org;
       } elsif option dhcp-user-class =	"engineering" {
	 max-lease-time	17600;
	 option	domain-name "engineering.example.org";
	 option	domain-name-servers ns1.engineering.example.org,
			   ns2.engineering.example.org;
       } else {
	 max-lease-time	600;
	 option	domain-name "misc.example.org";
	 option	domain-name-servers ns1.misc.example.org,
			   ns2.misc.example.org;
       }

       On the client side, an example of conditional evaluation	might be:

       # example.org filters DNS at its	firewall, so we	have to	use their DNS
       # servers when we connect to their network.  If we are not at
       # example.org, prefer our own DNS server.
       if not option domain-name = "example.org" {
	 prepend domain-name-servers 127.0.0.1;
       }

       The if statement	and the	elsif continuation statement both take boolean
       expressions as their arguments.	That is, they take  expressions	 that,
       when  evaluated,	produce	a boolean result.  If the expression evaluates
       to true,	then the statements enclosed in	braces following the if	state-
       ment are	executed, and  all  subsequent	elsif  and  else  clauses  are
       skipped.	  Otherwise,  each  subsequent	elsif  clause's	 expression is
       checked,	until an elsif clause is encountered whose test	 evaluates  to
       true.  If such a	clause is found, the statements	in braces following it
       are  executed,  and  then  any  subsequent  elsif  and else clauses are
       skipped.	 If all	the if and elsif clauses are checked but none of their
       expressions evaluate true, then if there	is an else clause, the	state-
       ments enclosed in braces	following the else are evaluated.  Boolean ex-
       pressions that evaluate to null are treated as false in conditionals.

       CONDITIONAL BEHAVIOUR: SWITCH

       The above example can be	rewritten using	a switch construct as well.

       switch (option dhcp-user-class) {
	 case "accounting":
	   max-lease-time 17600;
	   option domain-name "accounting.example.org";
	   option domain-name-servers ns1.accounting.example.org,
			     ns2.accounting.example.org;
	 case "sales":
	   max-lease-time 17600;
	   option domain-name "sales.example.org";
	   option domain-name-servers ns1.sales.example.org,
			     ns2.sales.example.org;
	   break;
	 case "engineering":
	   max-lease-time 17600;
	   option domain-name "engineering.example.org";
	   option domain-name-servers ns1.engineering.example.org,
			     ns2.engineering.example.org;
	   break;
	 default:
	   max-lease-time 600;
	   option domain-name "misc.example.org";
	   option domain-name-servers ns1.misc.example.org,
			     ns2.misc.example.org;
	   break;
       }

       The  switch  statement and the case statements can both be data expres-
       sions or	numeric	expressions.  Within a switch statement	they all  must
       be  the same type.  The server evaluates	the expression from the	switch
       statement and then it evaluates the expressions from  the  case	state-
       ments until it finds a match.

       If it finds a match it starts executing statements from that case until
       the  next  break	 statement.  If	it doesn't find	a match	it starts from
       the default statement and again proceeds	to the next  break  statement.
       If there	is no match and	no default it does nothing.

BOOLEAN	EXPRESSIONS
       The  following is the current list of boolean expressions that are sup-
       ported by the DHCP distribution.

       data-expression-1 = data-expression-2

	 The = operator	compares the values of two data	expressions, returning
	 true if they are the same, false if they  are	not.   If  either  the
	 left-hand  side  or  the right-hand side are null, the	result is also
	 null.

       data-expression-1 ~= data-expression-2  data-expression-1  ~~  data-ex-
       pression-2

	 The  ~=  and  ~~ operators (not available on all systems) perform ex-
	 tended	regex(7) matching of the values	of two data  expressions,  re-
	 turning true if data-expression-1 matches against the regular expres-
	 sion evaluated	by data-expression-2, or false if it does not match or
	 encounters  some  error.   If either the left-hand side or the	right-
	 hand side are null or empty strings, the result is also  false.   The
	 ~~  operator differs from the ~= operator in that it is case-insensi-
	 tive.

       boolean-expression-1 and	boolean-expression-2

	 The and operator evaluates to true if the boolean expression  on  the
	 left-hand side	and the	boolean	expression on the right-hand side both
	 evaluate  to  true.  Otherwise, it evaluates to false.	 If either the
	 expression on the left-hand side or the expression on the  right-hand
	 side are null,	the result is null.

       boolean-expression-1 or boolean-expression-2

	 The or	operator evaluates to true if either the boolean expression on
	 the  left-hand	 side or the boolean expression	on the right-hand side
	 evaluate to true.  Otherwise, it evaluates to false.  If  either  the
	 expression  on	the left-hand side or the expression on	the right-hand
	 side are null,	the result is null.

       not boolean-expression

	 The not operator evaluates to true if boolean-expression evaluates to
	 false,	and returns false if boolean-expression	evaluates to true.  If
	 boolean-expression evaluates to null, the result is also null.

       exists option-name

	 The exists expression returns true if the specified option exists  in
	 the incoming DHCP packet being	processed.
       known

	 The known expression returns true if the client whose request is cur-
	 rently	being processed	is known - that	is, if there's a host declara-
	 tion for it.
       static

	 The  static  expression  returns  true	 if  the lease assigned	to the
	 client	whose request is currently being processed is derived  from  a
	 static	address	assignment.

DATA EXPRESSIONS
       Several of the boolean expressions above	depend on the results of eval-
       uating data expressions.	 A list	of these expressions is	provided here.

       substring (data-expr, offset, length)

	 The  substring	operator evaluates the data expression and returns the
	 substring of the result of that evaluation that starts	 offset	 bytes
	 from  the  beginning, continuing for length bytes.  Offset and	length
	 are both numeric expressions.	If data-expr, offset or	length	evalu-
	 ate to	null, then the result is also null.  If	offset is greater than
	 or equal to the length	of the evaluated data, then a zero-length data
	 string	 is  returned.	If length is greater then the remaining	length
	 of the	evaluated data after offset, then a data string	containing all
	 data from offset to the end of	the evaluated data is returned.

       suffix (data-expr, length)

	 The suffix operator evaluates data-expr and returns the  last	length
	 bytes	of the result of that evaluation.  Length is a numeric expres-
	 sion.	If data-expr or	length evaluate	to null, then  the  result  is
	 also  null.   If suffix evaluates to a	number greater than the	length
	 of the	evaluated data,	then the evaluated data	is returned.

       lcase (data-expr)

	 The lcase function returns the	result of  evaluating  data-expr  con-
	 verted	 to  lower case.  If data-expr evaluates to null, then the re-
	 sult is also null.

       ucase (data-expr)

	 The ucase function returns the	result of  evaluating  data-expr  con-
	 verted	 to  upper case.  If data-expr evaluates to null, then the re-
	 sult is also null.

       option option-name

	 The option operator returns the contents of the specified  option  in
	 the packet to which the server	is responding.

       config-option option-name

	 The config-option operator returns the	value for the specified	option
	 that the DHCP client or server	has been configured to send.

       gethostname()

	 The gethostname() function returns a data string whose	contents are a
	 character  string,  the results of calling gethostname() on the local
	 system	with a size limit of 255 bytes (not  including	NULL  termina-
	 tor).	This can be used for example to	configure dhclient to send the
	 local	hostname  without  knowing  the	 local	hostname  at  the time
	 dhclient.conf is written.

       hardware

	 The hardware operator returns a data string whose  first  element  is
	 the  type  of network interface indicated in packet being considered,
	 and whose subsequent elements are client's  link-layer	 address.   If
	 there is no packet, or	if the RFC2131 hlen field is invalid, then the
	 result	is null.  Hardware types include ethernet (1), token-ring (6),
	 and  fddi (8).	 Hardware types	are specified by the IETF, and details
	 on how	the type numbers are defined can be found in RFC2131  (in  the
	 ISC DHCP distribution,	this is	included in the	doc/ subdirectory).

       packet (offset, length)

	 The packet operator returns the specified portion of the packet being
	 considered,  or null in contexts where	no packet is being considered.
	 Offset	and length are applied to the contents packet as in  the  sub-
	 string	operator.

       string

	 A  string, enclosed in	quotes,	may be specified as a data expression,
	 and returns the text between the quotes, encoded in ASCII.  The back-
	 slash ('\') character is treated specially, as	in C programming: '\t'
	 means TAB, '\r' means carriage	return,	'\n' means newline,  and  '\b'
	 means	bell.  Any octal value can be specified	with '\nnn', where nnn
	 is any	positive octal number less than	0400.  Any  hexadecimal	 value
	 can  be  specified  with '\xnn', where	nn is any positive hexadecimal
	 number	less than or equal to 0xff.

       colon-separated hexadecimal list

	 A list	of hexadecimal octet values, separated by colons, may be spec-
	 ified as a data expression.

       concat (data-expr1, ...,	data-exprN)
	 The expressions are evaluated,	and the	results	of each	evaluation are
	 concatenated in the sequence that the subexpressions are listed.   If
	 any  subexpression evaluates to null, the result of the concatenation
	 is null.

       reverse (numeric-expr1, data-expr2)
	 The two expressions are evaluated, and	then the result	of  evaluating
	 the  data  expression	is  reversed in	place, using hunks of the size
	 specified in the numeric expression.  For example, if the numeric ex-
	 pression evaluates to four, and  the  data  expression	 evaluates  to
	 twelve	 bytes	of  data, then the reverse expression will evaluate to
	 twelve	bytes of data, consisting of the last four bytes of the	 input
	 data,	followed  by the middle	four bytes, followed by	the first four
	 bytes.

       leased-address
	 In any	context	where the client whose request is being	processed  has
	 been assigned an IP address, this data	expression returns that	IP ad-
	 dress.	  In  any  context  where  the	client	whose request is being
	 processed has not been	assigned an ip address,	if this	 data  expres-
	 sion  is found	in executable statements executed on that client's be-
	 half, a log message indicating	"there is  no  lease  associated  with
	 this  client"	is  syslogged  to  the debug level (this is considered
	 dhcpd.conf debugging information).

       binary-to-ascii (numeric-expr1, numeric-expr2, data-expr1, data-expr2)
	 Converts the result of	evaluating data-expr2 into a text string  con-
	 taining one number for	each element of	the result of evaluating data-
	 expr2.	  Each	number	is  separated  from the	other by the result of
	 evaluating data-expr1.	 The result of evaluating numeric-expr1	speci-
	 fies the base (2 through 16) into which the numbers  should  be  con-
	 verted.   The	result of evaluating numeric-expr2 specifies the width
	 in bits of each number, which may be either 8,	16 or 32.

	 As an example of the preceding	three types of expressions, to produce
	 the name of a PTR record for the  IP  address	being  assigned	 to  a
	 client, one could write the following expression:

	       concat (binary-to-ascii (10, 8, ".",
					reverse	(1, leased-address)),
		       ".in-addr.arpa.");

       encode-int (numeric-expr, width)
	 Numeric-expr  is evaluated and	encoded	as a data string of the	speci-
	 fied width, in	network	byte order (most significant byte first).   If
	 the  numeric  expression  evaluates  to the null value, the result is
	 also null.

       pick-first-value	(data-expr1 [ ... exprn	] )
	 The pick-first-value function takes any number	of data	expressions as
	 its arguments.	 Each expression is evaluated, starting	with the first
	 in the	list, until an expression is found that	does not evaluate to a
	 null value.  That expression is returned, and none of the  subsequent
	 expressions  are  evaluated.	If  all	expressions evaluate to	a null
	 value,	the null value is returned.

       host-decl-name
	 The host-decl-name function returns the name of the host  declaration
	 that  matched	the client whose request is currently being processed,
	 if any.  If no	host declaration  matched,  the	 result	 is  the  null
	 value.

NUMERIC	EXPRESSIONS
       Numeric	expressions  are  expressions that evaluate to an integer.  In
       general,	the maximum size of such an integer should not be  assumed  to
       be representable	in fewer than 32 bits, but the precision of such inte-
       gers may	be more	than 32	bits.

       In  addition to the following operators several standard	math functions
       are available.  They are:
       operation    symbol
       add	      +
       subtract	      -
       divide	      /
       multiply	      *
       modulus	      %
       bitwise and    &
       bitwise or     |
       bitwise xor    ^

       extract-int (data-expr, width)

	 The extract-int operator extracts an integer value  in	 network  byte
	 order	from  the  result of evaluating	the specified data expression.
	 Width is the width in bits of the integer to extract.	Currently, the
	 only supported	widths are 8, 16 and 32.  If  the  evaluation  of  the
	 data expression doesn't provide sufficient bits to extract an integer
	 of the	specified size,	the null value is returned.

       lease-time

	 The  duration	of the current lease - that is,	the difference between
	 the current time and the time that the	lease expires.

       number

	 Any number between zero and the maximum  representable	 size  may  be
	 specified as a	numeric	expression.

       client-state

	 The  current  state  of the client instance being processed.  This is
	 only useful in	DHCP client configuration files.  Possible values are:

	 +o Booting - DHCP client is in the INIT	state, and does	not  yet  have
	   an  IP  address.   The  next	message	transmitted will be a DHCPDIS-
	   COVER, which	will be	broadcast.

	 +o Reboot - DHCP client	is in the INIT-REBOOT state.  It has an	IP ad-
	   dress, but is not yet using it.  The	next message to	be transmitted
	   will	be a DHCPREQUEST, which	will be	broadcast.  If no response  is
	   heard,  the	client	will bind to its address and move to the BOUND
	   state.

	 +o Select - DHCP client	is in the SELECTING state - it has received at
	   least one DHCPOFFER message,	but is waiting to see if  it  may  re-
	   ceive other DHCPOFFER messages from other servers.  No messages are
	   sent	in the SELECTING state.

	 +o Request  - DHCP client is in	the REQUESTING state - it has received
	   at least one	DHCPOFFER message, and has chosen which	 one  it  will
	   request.   The  next	 message to be sent will be a DHCPREQUEST mes-
	   sage, which will be broadcast.

	 +o Bound - DHCP	client is in the BOUND state - it has an  IP  address.
	   No messages are transmitted in this state.

	 +o Renew  -  DHCP  client  is in the RENEWING state - it has an	IP ad-
	   dress, and is trying	to contact the server to renew it.   The  next
	   message  to	be  sent  will be a DHCPREQUEST	message, which will be
	   unicast directly to the server.

	 +o Rebind - DHCP client	is in the REBINDING state - it has an  IP  ad-
	   dress,  and	is trying to contact any server	to renew it.  The next
	   message to be sent will be a	DHCPREQUEST, which will	be broadcast.

REFERENCE: ACTION EXPRESSIONS
       log (priority, data-expr)

	 Logging statements may	be used	to send	information  to	 the  standard
	 logging  channels.  A logging statement includes an optional priority
	 (fatal, error,	info, or debug), and a data expression.

	 Logging statements take only a	single data expression argument, so if
	 you want to output multiple data values, you will  need  to  use  the
	 concat	operator to concatenate	them.

       execute (command-path [,	data-expr1, ...	data-exprN]);

	 The  execute  statement runs an external command.  The	first argument
	 is a string literal containing	the name or path  of  the  command  to
	 run.	The other arguments, if	present, are either string literals or
	 data- expressions which evaluate to text strings,  to	be  passed  as
	 command-line arguments	to the command.

	 execute  is  synchronous;  the	 program will block until the external
	 command being run has finished.  Please note that lengthy program ex-
	 ecution (for example, in an "on commit" in dhcpd.conf)	may result  in
	 bad  performance  and timeouts.  Only external	applications with very
	 short execution times are suitable for	use.

	 Passing user-supplied data to an external application might  be  dan-
	 gerous.   Make	sure the external application checks input buffers for
	 validity.  Non-printable ASCII	 characters  will  be  converted  into
	 dhcpd.conf  language  octal escapes ("\nnn"), make sure your external
	 command handles them as such.

	 It is possible	to use the execute statement in	any context, not  only
	 on  events.   If  you	put it in a regular scope in the configuration
	 file you will execute that command every time a scope is evaluated.

       parse-vendor-option;

	 The parse-vendor-option statement attempts to parse a	vendor	option
	 (code 43).  It	is only	useful while processing	a packet on the	server
	 and  requires	that the administrator has already used	the vendor-op-
	 tion-space statement to select	a valid	vendor space.

	 This functionality may	be used	if the server needs to take  different
	 actions  depending  on	the values the client placed in	the vendor op-
	 tion and the sub-options are not at fixed locations.  It  is  handled
	 as  an	 action	 to allow an administrator to examine the incoming op-
	 tions and choose the correct vendor space.

REFERENCE: DYNAMIC DNS UPDATES
       See the dhcpd.conf and dhclient.conf man	 pages	for  more  information
       about DDNS.

SEE ALSO
       dhcpd.conf(5),	dhcpd.leases(5),   dhclient.conf(5),  dhcp-options(5),
       dhcpd(8), dhclient(8), RFC2132, RFC2131.

AUTHOR
       Information  about  Internet  Systems  Consortium  can  be   found   at
       https://www.isc.org.

								  dhcp-eval(5)

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