When DHCP Failover Status is degraded, the DHCP service is not functioning.
A.
True
B.
False
The Answer Is:
B
This question includes an explanation.
Explanation:
Comprehensive and Detailed In-Depth Explanation:DHCP Failover in NIOS ensures redundancy, and its status reflects operational health:
Degraded Status:Not an official NIOS failover state (e.g., NORMAL, COMMUNICATIONS-INTERRUPTED, PARTNER-DOWN). Likely a misnomer for a partial issue (e.g., COMMUNICATIONS-INTERRUPTED or high lease usage). Even in such states, DHCP service continues:
Clients renew leases from the surviving peer.
New leases are issued within limits (e.g., MCLT).
Why False:"Not functioning" implies total failure, but failover design ensures partial service persists unless both peers are down (e.g., HARDWARE-FAILURE state). A degraded-like condition doesn’t stop DHCP entirely.
Practical Example:In an INE lab, you’d simulate a peer losing sync (COMMUNICATIONS-INTERRUPTED), verify clients still get IPs, and troubleshoot via DHCP logs, proving service continuity.References:Infoblox NIOS Administrator Guide – DHCP Failover States; INE Course Content: NIOS DDI DHCP Troubleshooting.
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