Not directly, but yes.
Adtran's DHCP server is well-behaved and will only respond on a VLAN that is both:
There are other DHCP servers in use that are not so well-behaved, including Microsoft Windows. You need to ensure that only VLANs in the subnet(s) on which the Windows server is providing DHCP appear on any port to which a Windows DHCP server is connected. Otherwise the Windows server will "jump" the VLAN and assign addresses on the wrong subnet, even if the VLAN in question isn't configured on the Windows server itself. This is a typical cause of phones being assigned IPs on the data subnet instead of voice. The fix is to configure the port to which the Windows server is connected is an access port on the data VLAN only.
Not directly, but yes.
Adtran's DHCP server is well-behaved and will only respond on a VLAN that is both:
There are other DHCP servers in use that are not so well-behaved, including Microsoft Windows. You need to ensure that only VLANs in the subnet(s) on which the Windows server is providing DHCP appear on any port to which a Windows DHCP server is connected. Otherwise the Windows server will "jump" the VLAN and assign addresses on the wrong subnet, even if the VLAN in question isn't configured on the Windows server itself. This is a typical cause of phones being assigned IPs on the data subnet instead of voice. The fix is to configure the port to which the Windows server is connected is an access port on the data VLAN only.
Thanks for the info. I got the DHCP server working but I need to restrict the address range which it gives out to clients. Is there a way to restrict it to a range within my subnet? Thanks
Never mind, I found where to exclude ip ranges. Thanks