This is an old revision of the document!
Technical note for the section on DHCP fringerprint and as through it, users could classify and apply roles based on them.
DHCP Fingerprinting
DHCP Fingerprinting is a method of detecting the end device OS based on the dhcp exchange packets. In today's network where we are talking about IoE , BYOD it is required to identify the devices in your network and mark them accordingly.
Why do we need Fingerprinting:
With BYOD personal devices are making their way into the workplace, and it is a tough job for the network administrators to dynamically detect these devices and make sure these devices are compliant and to enforce required polices on these devices. Detecting the devices type/OS is also part of the play.
Due to the proliferation of BYOD (Bring Your Own Devices)/mobile devices connecting mostly over the Wireless Network, it becomes difficult to identify and control the types of devices that can connect to the network, and once connected, to determine what access privileges they might have.
With DHCP Fingerprinting, DHCP Servers or devices like IPAM Controllers or Wireless Controllers, can use DHCP Fingerprinting to identify the device type, manufacturer name and OS of the clients/devices connecting to the network, categorize them into ACLs, and control which device can connect to the network and what it can do.
How it works:
DHCP Fingerprinting is one of the methods that help us in identifying the OS on the devices bases on the dhcp option.