On Sun, 13 Jun 2004, Matt . wrote: > I didn't see the start of this thread, but here's my $0.02 ... > > The DHCP server shouldn't care what interface the request came in on, rather > it looks at the source network of the request. > > So you server could support many different ranges, provided there was > suitable separation (i.e. a router) between the subnets and the server. > > In your case, the server is acting as the router, but having separate > interfaces on the server itself is not a requirement (of any DHCP server I > know of) Okay, it's been awhile since I set up our dhcp at work, but if I remember correctly, dhcp requests don't usually route. I believe that we had to set up our central router (a Cisco Catalyst 3550 set up to route instead of switch) to forward the dhcp requests to the dhcp server on our server subnet. Otherwise we'd have had to have had a dhcp server on each subnet. Ben