Abstract

Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) is just as much a fundamental service for the Internet to work as DNS (Domain Name System). For IPv6 this means leveraging DHCPv6 to handle IPv6 address allocations. DHCPv6 is the way modern networks allocate IPv6 addresses on a LAN (local area network) and DHCP is what has been traditionally used for IPv4 addresses in the past. DHCP and DHCPv6 are not unique to Windows because all modern Internet systems use DHCP to do the address allocation function. Apple's OSX, Linux, and BSD all make use of their own implementations of DHCP and DHCPv6 servers which are principally based on the code from Internet Systems Consortium (ISC).

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