| Jeffrey Schiller and Mark Rosenstein. A Protocol for the Dynamic Assignment of IP Addresses for use on an Ethernet. (Available from the Athena Project, MIT), 1989. |
....only support static allocation (conversion) of an IP address. RARP and BOOTP protocol do not solve the requirement of dynamic allocation. Secondly, these protocol can provide only few parameters. Another protocol called NIP (Network Information Protocol) has the mechanism of dynamic allocation[10]. It is based on the Polling Defense mechanism. When the NIP client requests an IP address, NIP server returns a set of IP address which is available in the network. NIP client selects one IP address from the network, and checks its availability with ARP 2 . If ARP replies, NIP client will ....
J. Schiller, and M. Rosenstein, "A Protocol for the Dynamic Assignment of IP Addresses for use on an Ethernet", MIT Athena Project, 1989.
No context found.
Jeffrey Schiller and Mark Rosenstein. A Protocol for the Dynamic Assignment of IP Addresses for use on an Ethernet. (Available from the Athena Project, MIT), 1989.
No context found.
Jeffrey Schiller and Mark Rosenstein. A Protocol for the Dynamic Assignment of IP Addresses for use on an Ethernet. (Available from the Athena Project, MIT), 1989.
No context found.
Jeffrey Schiller and Mark Rosenstein. A Protocol for the Dynamic Assignment of IP Addresses for use on an Ethernet. (Available from the Athena Project, MIT), 1989.
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