Don’t get caught out by Virtual Server’s built-in DHCP server

This content is 19 years old. I don't routinely update old blog posts as they are only intended to represent a view at a particular point in time. Please be warned that the information here may be out of date.

A couple of weeks back, I was testing a DHCP configuration scenario using a number of virtual machines and needed them to obtain their IP addresses from a Windows 2000 DHCP server within my virtual network. That should work, but for some reason, my virtual clients were picking up strange private IP addresses in the range 10.237.0.16-10.237.255.254 (not even the familiar automatic private IP addresses in the range 169.254.0.1-169.254.255.254). After a while, I discovered that Virtual Server has the capability to provide its own DHCP service and that this was enabled. By editing the configuration for the internal network I was using, I could disable Virtual Server’s DHCP server, allowing my clients to locate the correct DHCP server.

4 thoughts on “Don’t get caught out by Virtual Server’s built-in DHCP server

  1. Thans dude. Youre a live saver. I was booting WinPE created with BDD. But it found the wrong DHCP. Now i know. I disabled it and WinPE is working like a charm.

    THANKS.

  2. Thanks, saved me a lot of time when I Googled for 10.237.0.16 to find out why on Earth I was getting that instead of an IP from the range I expected from our internal DHCP server :)

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