To continue a bit more for the security implication of this. When the "reserved IP device" comes online, whichever IP it might acquire:Either it collides with existing IP - breaking the network for those devicesOr it gets a new one and again, is not within its firewall-ruleset bound to its "reserved" IPSo either-or its quite a problem.
Quote from: Kallex on August 16, 2021, 04:51:44 pmTo continue a bit more for the security implication of this. When the "reserved IP device" comes online, whichever IP it might acquire:Either it collides with existing IP - breaking the network for those devicesOr it gets a new one and again, is not within its firewall-ruleset bound to its "reserved" IPSo either-or its quite a problem.Or it gets no IP with "no free leases"? Havve you tried?For networks with specific rules for dedicated/reserved IPs based on MAC I don't hand out any IPs to unknown MACs (checkbox for DHCP). End of story (I guess)...