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+.. _hooks-lease-cmds:
+
+``lease_cmds``: Lease Commands for Easier Lease Management
+==========================================================
+
+Kea allows users to store lease information in several
+backends (memfile, MySQL, and PostgreSQL), and the Lease Commands library provides an
+interface that can manipulate leases in a unified, safe way.
+In particular, it allows things that were previously impossible: lease
+manipulation in memfile while Kea is running, sanity check changes,
+lease existence checks, and removal of all leases belonging to a
+specific subnet. The hook library can also catch more obscure errors, like an attempt
+to add a lease with a ``subnet-id`` that does not exist in the
+configuration, or configuring a lease to use an address that is outside
+of the subnet to which it is supposed to belong. The library also
+provides a non-programmatic way to manage user contexts associated with
+leases.
+
+The Lease Commands library is part of the open source code and is
+available to every Kea user.
+
+.. note::
+
+ This library can only be loaded by the ``kea-dhcp4`` or the
+ ``kea-dhcp6`` process.
+
+There are many situations where an administrative command may be useful;
+for example, during migration between servers or different vendors, when
+a certain network is being retired, or when a device has been
+disconnected and the system administrator knows that it will not be coming
+back. The ``get`` queries may be useful for automating certain management
+and monitoring tasks, and they can also act as preparatory steps for lease
+updates and removals.
+
+This library provides the following commands:
+
+- ``lease4-add`` - adds a new IPv4 lease.
+
+- ``lease6-add`` - adds a new IPv6 lease.
+
+- ``lease6-bulk-apply`` - creates, updates, and/or deletes multiple
+ IPv6 leases in a single transaction.
+
+- ``lease4-get`` - checks whether an IPv4 lease with the specified
+ parameters exists and returns it if it does.
+
+- ``lease6-get`` - checks whether an IPv6 lease with the specified
+ parameters exists and returns it if it does.
+
+- ``lease4-get-all`` - returns all IPv4 leases or all IPv4 leases for
+ the specified subnets.
+
+- ``lease6-get-all`` - returns all IPv6 leases or all IPv6 leases for
+ the specified subnets.
+
+- ``lease4-get-page`` - returns a set ("page") of leases from the list
+ of all IPv4 leases in the database. By iterating through the pages it
+ is possible to retrieve all the leases.
+
+- ``lease6-get-page`` - returns a set ("page") of leases from the list
+ of all IPv6 leases in the database. By iterating through the pages it
+ is possible to retrieve all the leases.
+
+- ``lease4-get-by-hw-address`` - returns all IPv4 leases with the specified
+ hardware address.
+
+- ``lease4-get-by-client-id`` - returns all IPv4 leases with the specified
+ ``client-id``.
+
+- ``lease6-get-by-duid`` - returns all IPv6 leases with the specified DUID.
+
+- ``lease4-get-by-hostname`` - returns all IPv4 leases with the specified
+ hostname.
+
+- ``lease6-get-by-hostname`` - returns all IPv6 leases with the specified
+ hostname.
+
+- ``lease4-del`` - deletes an IPv4 lease with the specified parameters.
+
+- ``lease6-del`` - deletes an IPv6 lease with the specified parameters.
+
+- ``lease4-update`` - updates an IPv4 lease.
+
+- ``lease6-update`` - updates an IPv6 lease.
+
+- ``lease4-wipe`` - removes all leases from a specific IPv4 subnet or
+ from all subnets.
+
+- ``lease6-wipe`` - removes all leases from a specific IPv6 subnet or
+ from all subnets.
+
+- ``lease4-resend-ddns`` - resends a request to update DNS entries for
+ an existing lease.
+
+- ``lease6-resend-ddns`` - resends a request to update DNS entries for
+ an existing lease.
+
+All commands use JSON syntax and can be issued either using the control
+channel (see :ref:`ctrl-channel`) or Control Agent (see
+:ref:`kea-ctrl-agent`).
+
+The library can be loaded in the same way as other hook libraries, and
+it does not take any parameters. It supports both the DHCPv4 and DHCPv6
+servers.
+
+::
+
+ "Dhcp6": {
+ "hooks-libraries": [
+ {
+ "library": "/path/libdhcp_lease_cmds.so"
+ }
+ ...
+ ]
+ }
+
+.. _command-lease4-add:
+
+.. _command-lease6-add:
+
+The ``lease4-add``, ``lease6-add`` Commands
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+The ``lease4-add`` and ``lease6-add`` commands allow a new lease
+to be created. Typically Kea creates a lease when it first sees a new
+device; however, sometimes it may be convenient to create the lease
+manually. The ``lease4-add`` command requires at least two parameters:
+an IPv4 address and an identifier, i.e. hardware (MAC) address. A third
+parameter, ``subnet-id``, is optional. If the ``subnet-id`` is not specified or
+the specified value is 0, Kea tries to determine the value by running
+a subnet-selection procedure. If specified, however, its value must
+match the existing subnet. The simplest successful call might look as
+follows:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease4-add",
+ "arguments": {
+ "ip-address": "192.0.2.202",
+ "hw-address": "1a:1b:1c:1d:1e:1f"
+ }
+ }
+
+The ``lease6-add`` command requires three parameters: an IPv6 address,
+an IAID value (identity association identifier, a value sent by
+clients), and a DUID. As with ``lease4-add``, the ``subnet-id`` parameter is
+optional. If the ``subnet-id`` is not specified or the provided value is 0,
+Kea tries to determine the value by running a subnet-selection
+procedure. If specified, however, its value must match the existing
+subnet. For example:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease6-add",
+ "arguments": {
+ "subnet-id": 66,
+ "ip-address": "2001:db8::3",
+ "duid": "1a:1b:1c:1d:1e:1f:20:21:22:23:24",
+ "iaid": 1234
+ }
+ }
+
+``lease6-add`` can also be used to add leases for IPv6 prefixes. In this
+case there are three additional parameters that must be specified:
+``subnet-id``, ``type`` (set to "IA_PD"), and prefix length. The actual
+prefix is set using the ``ip-address`` field. Note that Kea cannot guess
+``subnet-id`` values for prefixes; they must be specified explicitly. For
+example, to configure a lease for prefix 2001:db8:abcd::/48, the
+following command can be used:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease6-add",
+ "arguments": {
+ "subnet-id": 66,
+ "type": "IA_PD",
+ "ip-address": "2001:db8:abcd::",
+ "prefix-len": 48,
+ "duid": "1a:1b:1c:1d:1e:1f:20:21:22:23:24",
+ "iaid": 1234
+ }
+ }
+
+The commands can take several additional optional parameters:
+
+- ``valid-lft`` - specifies the lifetime of the lease, expressed in
+ seconds. If not specified, the value configured in the subnet related
+ to the specified ``subnet-id`` is used.
+
+- ``expire`` - creates a timestamp of the lease expiration time,
+ expressed in UNIX format (seconds since 1 Jan 1970). If not
+ specified, the default value is the current time plus the lease lifetime (the value
+ of ``valid-lft``).
+
+- ``fqdn-fwd`` - specifies whether the lease should be marked as if a
+ forward DNS update were conducted. This only affects the
+ data stored in the lease database, and no DNS update will be
+ performed. If configured, a DNS update to remove the A or AAAA
+ records will be conducted when the lease is removed due to expiration
+ or being released by a client. If not specified, the default value is
+ ``false``. The hostname parameter must be specified if ``fqdn-fwd`` is set to
+ ``true``.
+
+- ``fqdn-rev`` - specifies whether the lease should be marked as if
+ reverse DNS update were conducted. This only affects the
+ data stored in the lease database, and no DNS update will be
+ performed.. If configured, a DNS update to remove the PTR record will
+ be conducted when the lease is removed due to expiration or being
+ released by a client. If not specified, the default value is ``false``.
+ The hostname parameter must be specified if ``fqdn-fwd`` is set to ``true``.
+
+- ``hostname`` - specifies the hostname to be associated with this
+ lease. Its value must be non-empty if either ``fqdn-fwd`` or ``fqdn-rev`` are
+ set to ``true``. If not specified, the default value is an empty string.
+
+- ``hw-address`` - optionally specifies a hardware (MAC) address for an
+ IPv6 lease. It is a mandatory parameter for an IPv4 lease.
+
+- ``client-id`` - optionally specifies a client identifier for an IPv4
+ lease.
+
+- ``preferred-lft`` - optionally specifies a preferred lifetime for
+ IPv6 leases. If not specified, the value configured for the subnet
+ corresponding to the specified ``subnet-id`` is used. This parameter is
+ not used when adding an IPv4 lease.
+
+- ``state`` - specifies the state of an added lease, which can be 0 for ``default``,
+ 1 for ``declined``, and 2 for the ``expired-reclaimed`` state. Any other
+ value causes an error. Using 1 for a ``"IA_PD"`` lease type is
+ illegal and will be rejected.
+
+- ``user-context`` - specifies the user context to be associated with
+ this lease. It must be a JSON map.
+
+Here is an example of a fairly complex lease addition:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease6-add",
+ "arguments": {
+ "subnet-id": 66,
+ "ip-address": "2001:db8::3",
+ "duid": "01:02:03:04:05:06:07:08",
+ "iaid": 1234,
+ "hw-address": "1a:1b:1c:1d:1e:1f",
+ "preferred-lft": 500,
+ "valid-lft": 1000,
+ "expire": 12345678,
+ "fqdn-fwd": true,
+ "fqdn-rev": true,
+ "state": 0,
+ "hostname": "urania.example.org",
+ "user-context": { "version": 1 }
+ }
+ }
+
+The command returns a status that indicates either success (result 0)
+or failure (result 1). A failed command always includes a text
+parameter that explains the cause of failure. For example:
+
+::
+
+ { "result": 0, "text": "Lease added." }
+
+Example failure:
+
+::
+
+ { "result": 1, "text": "missing parameter 'ip-address' (<string>:3:19)" }
+
+
+.. _command-lease6-bulk-apply:
+
+The ``lease6-bulk-apply`` Command
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+The ``lease6-bulk-apply`` was implemented to address
+the performance penalty in High-Availability mode when a single DHCPv6
+transaction resulted in multiple lease updates sent to the partner, if
+multiple address and/or prefix leases were allocated. Consider the case
+when a DHCPv6 client requests the assignment of two IPv6 addresses and two IPv6
+prefixes: it may result in the allocation of four leases. In addition,
+DHCPv6 may assign a different address than the one requested by the client during
+the renew or rebind stage, and delete the leases previously used by this client.
+There are six lease changes sent between the HA partners in this case.
+Sending these updates as individual commands, e.g. via ``lease6-update``,
+is highly inefficient and produces unnecessary delays in communication,
+both between the HA partners and in sending the response to the DHCPv6 client.
+
+The ``lease6-bulk-apply`` command deals with this
+problem by aggregating all lease changes - both deleted leases and
+new or updated leases - in a single command.
+The receiving server iterates over the deleted leases and deletes them
+from its lease database. Next, it iterates over the new/updated leases
+and adds them to the database or updates them if they already exist.
+
+Even though High Availability is the major application for
+this command, it can be freely used in all cases when it is desirable to
+send multiple lease changes in a single command.
+
+In the following example, we delete two leases and add
+or update two other leases in the database:
+
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease6-bulk-apply",
+ "arguments": {
+ "deleted-leases": [
+ {
+ "ip-address": "2001:db8:abcd::",
+ "type": "IA_PD",
+ ...
+ },
+ {
+ "ip-address": "2001:db8:abcd::234",
+ "type": "IA_NA",
+ ...
+ }
+ ],
+ "leases": [
+ {
+ "subnet-id": 66,
+ "ip-address": "2001:db8:cafe::",
+ "type": "IA_PD",
+ ...
+ },
+ {
+ "subnet-id": 66,
+ "ip-address": "2001:db8:abcd::333",
+ "type": "IA_NA",
+ ...
+ }
+ ]
+ }
+ }
+
+If any of the leases are malformed, no lease changes are applied
+to the lease database. If the leases are well-formed but there is a
+failure to apply any of the lease changes to the database, the command
+continues to be processed for other leases. All the leases for which
+the command was unable to apply the changes in the database are
+listed in the response. For example:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "result": 0,
+ "text": "Bulk apply of 2 IPv6 leases completed".
+ "arguments": {
+ "failed-deleted-leases": [
+ {
+ "ip-address": "2001:db8:abcd::",
+ "type": "IA_PD",
+ "result": 3,
+ "error-message": "no lease found"
+ }
+ ],
+ "failed-leases": [
+ {
+ "ip-address": "2001:db8:cafe::",
+ "type": "IA_PD",
+ "result": 1,
+ "error-message": "unable to communicate with the lease database"
+ }
+ ]
+ }
+ }
+
+The response above indicates that the hook library was unable to
+delete the lease for prefix "2001:db8:abcd::" and add or update the lease
+for prefix "2001:db8:cafe::". However, there are two other lease changes
+which have been applied as indicated by the text message. The
+``result`` is the status constant that indicates the type
+of the error experienced for the particular lease. The meanings of the
+returned codes are the same as the results returned for the commands.
+In particular, the result of 1 indicates an error while processing the
+lease, e.g. a communication error with the database. The result of 3
+indicates that an attempt to delete the lease was unsuccessful because
+such a lease doesn't exist (an empty result).
+
+.. _command-lease4-get:
+
+.. _command-lease6-get:
+
+The ``lease4-get``, ``lease6-get`` Commands
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+``lease4-get`` and ``lease6-get`` can be used to query the lease database
+and retrieve existing leases. There are two types of parameters the
+``lease4-get`` command supports: (``address``) or (``subnet-id``,
+``identifier-type``, ``identifier``). There are also two types for
+``lease6-get``: (``address``, ``type``) or (``subnet-id``, ``identifier-type``,
+``identifier``, ``IAID``, ``type``). The first type of query is used when the
+address (either IPv4 or IPv6) is known, but the details of the lease are
+not; one common use case of this type of query is to find out whether a
+given address is being used. The second query uses identifiers;
+currently supported identifiers for leases are: ``"hw-address"`` (IPv4
+only), ``"client-id"`` (IPv4 only), and ``"duid"`` (IPv6 only).
+
+An example ``lease4-get`` command for getting a lease using an IPv4
+address is:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease4-get",
+ "arguments": {
+ "ip-address": "192.0.2.1"
+ }
+ }
+
+An example of the ``lease6-get`` query is:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease6-get",
+ "arguments": {
+ "ip-address": "2001:db8:1234:ab::",
+ "type": "IA_PD"
+ }
+ }
+
+An example query by ``"hw-address"`` for an IPv4 lease looks as follows:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease4-get",
+ "arguments": {
+ "identifier-type": "hw-address",
+ "identifier": "08:08:08:08:08:08",
+ "subnet-id": 44
+ }
+ }
+
+An example query by ``"client-id"`` for an IPv4 lease looks as follows:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease4-get",
+ "arguments": {
+ "identifier-type": "client-id",
+ "identifier": "01:01:02:03:04:05:06",
+ "subnet-id": 44
+ }
+ }
+
+An example query by (``subnet-id``, ``identifier-type``, ``identifier``, ``iaid``, ``type``)
+for an IPv6 lease is:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease4-get",
+ "arguments": {
+ "identifier-type": "duid",
+ "identifier": "08:08:08:08:08:08",
+ "iaid": 1234567,
+ "type": "IA_NA",
+ "subnet-id": 44
+ }
+ }
+
+The ``type`` is an optional parameter. Supported values are: ``IA_NA``
+(non-temporary address) and ``IA_PD`` (IPv6 prefix). If not specified, ``IA_NA``
+is assumed.
+
+``lease4-get`` and ``lease6-get`` return an indication of the result of the operation
+and lease details, if found. The result has one of the following values: 0
+(success), 1 (error), or 3 (empty). An empty result means that a query
+has been completed properly, but the object (a lease in this case) has
+not been found.
+The lease parameters, if found, are returned as arguments.
+``client-id`` is not returned if empty.
+
+An example result returned when the host was found:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "arguments": {
+ "client-id": "42:42:42:42:42:42:42:42",
+ "cltt": 12345678,
+ "fqdn-fwd": false,
+ "fqdn-rev": true,
+ "hostname": "myhost.example.com.",
+ "hw-address": "08:08:08:08:08:08",
+ "ip-address": "192.0.2.1",
+ "state": 0,
+ "subnet-id": 44,
+ "valid-lft": 3600
+ },
+ "result": 0,
+ "text": "IPv4 lease found."
+ }
+
+.. note::
+
+ The client last transaction time (``cltt`` field) is bound to the
+ valid lifetime (``valid-lft``) and to the expire date (not reported
+ here but stored in databases) by the equation
+ :math:`cltt + valid\_lft = expire`
+
+ at the exception of the infinite valid lifetime coded by the
+ 0xfffffff (4294967295) special value which makes the expire value
+ to overflow on MySQL and old PostgreSQL backends where timestamps
+ are 32 bit long. So in these lease databases the expire date is the
+ same as the cltt i.e.
+ :math:`cltt = expire` when :math:`valid\_lft = 4294967295` and the
+ lease backend is MySQL or PostgreSQL.
+
+.. _command-lease4-get-all:
+
+.. _command-lease6-get-all:
+
+The ``lease4-get-all``, ``lease6-get-all`` Commands
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+``lease4-get-all`` and ``lease6-get-all`` are used to retrieve all IPv4
+or IPv6 leases, or all leases for the specified set of subnets. All
+leases are returned when there are no arguments specified with the
+command, as in the following example:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease4-get-all"
+ }
+
+If arguments are provided, it is expected that they contain the
+``"subnets"`` parameter, which is a list of subnet identifiers for which
+leases should be returned. For example, to retrieve all IPv6
+leases belonging to the subnets with identifiers 1, 2, 3, and 4:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease6-get-all",
+ "arguments": {
+ "subnets": [ 1, 2, 3, 4 ]
+ }
+ }
+
+The returned response contains a detailed list of leases in the
+following format:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "arguments": {
+ "leases": [
+ {
+ "cltt": 12345678,
+ "duid": "42:42:42:42:42:42:42:42",
+ "fqdn-fwd": false,
+ "fqdn-rev": true,
+ "hostname": "myhost.example.com.",
+ "hw-address": "08:08:08:08:08:08",
+ "iaid": 1,
+ "ip-address": "2001:db8:2::1",
+ "preferred-lft": 500,
+ "state": 0,
+ "subnet-id": 44,
+ "type": "IA_NA",
+ "valid-lft": 3600
+ },
+ {
+ "cltt": 12345678,
+ "duid": "21:21:21:21:21:21:21:21",
+ "fqdn-fwd": false,
+ "fqdn-rev": true,
+ "hostname": "",
+ "iaid": 1,
+ "ip-address": "2001:db8:0:0:2::",
+ "preferred-lft": 500,
+ "prefix-len": 80,
+ "state": 0,
+ "subnet-id": 44,
+ "type": "IA_PD",
+ "valid-lft": 3600
+ }
+ ]
+ },
+ "result": 0,
+ "text": "2 IPv6 lease(s) found."
+ }
+
+.. warning::
+
+ The ``lease4-get-all`` and ``lease6-get-all`` commands may result in
+ very large responses. This may have a negative impact on the DHCP
+ server's responsiveness while the response is generated and
+ transmitted over the control channel, as the server imposes no
+ restriction on the number of leases returned as a result of this
+ command.
+
+.. _command-lease4-get-page:
+
+.. _command-lease6-get-page:
+
+The ``lease4-get-page``, ``lease6-get-page`` Commands
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+The ``lease4-get-all`` and ``lease6-get-all`` commands may result in
+very large responses; generating such a response may consume CPU
+bandwidth as well as memory. It may even cause the server to become
+unresponsive. In the case of large lease databases it is usually better to
+retrieve leases in chunks, using the paging mechanism.
+``lease4-get-page`` and ``lease6-get-page`` implement a paging mechanism
+for DHCPv4 and DHCPv6 servers, respectively. The following command
+retrieves the first 1024 IPv4 leases:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease4-get-page",
+ "arguments": {
+ "from": "start",
+ "limit": 1024
+ }
+ }
+
+The keyword ``start`` denotes that the first page of leases should be
+retrieved. Alternatively, an IPv4 zero address can be specified to
+retrieve the first page:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease4-get-page",
+ "arguments": {
+ "from": "0.0.0.0",
+ "limit": 1024
+ }
+ }
+
+Similarly, the IPv6 zero address can be specified in the
+``lease6-get-page`` command:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease6-get-page",
+ "arguments": {
+ "from": "::",
+ "limit": 6
+ }
+ }
+
+The response has the following structure:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "arguments": {
+ "leases": [
+ {
+ "ip-address": "2001:db8:2::1",
+ ...
+ },
+ {
+ "ip-address": "2001:db8:2::9",
+ ...
+ },
+ {
+ "ip-address": "2001:db8:3::1",
+ ...
+ },
+ {
+ "ip-address": "2001:db8:5::3",
+ ...
+ }
+ {
+ "ip-address": "2001:db8:4::1",
+ ...
+ },
+ {
+ "ip-address": "2001:db8:2::7",
+ ...
+ }
+
+ ],
+ "count": 6
+ },
+ "result": 0,
+ "text": "6 IPv6 lease(s) found."
+ }
+
+Note that the leases' details were excluded from the response above for
+brevity.
+
+Generally, the returned list is not sorted in any particular order. Some
+lease database backends may sort leases in ascending order of addresses,
+but the controlling client must not rely on this behavior.
+
+The ``count`` parameter contains the number of returned leases on the
+page.
+
+To fetch the next page, the client must use the last address of the
+current page as an input to the next ``lease4-get-page`` or
+``lease6-get-page`` command call. In this example it is:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease6-get-page",
+ "arguments": {
+ "from": "2001:db8:2::7",
+ "count": 6
+ }
+ }
+
+because 2001:db8:2::7 is the last address on the current page.
+
+The client may assume that it has reached the last page when the
+``count`` value is lower than that specified in the command; this
+includes the case when the ``count`` is equal to 0, meaning that no
+leases were found.
+
+.. _command-lease4-get-by-hw-address:
+
+.. _command-lease4-get-by-client-id:
+
+.. _command-lease6-get-by-duid:
+
+.. _command-lease4-get-by-hostname:
+
+.. _command-lease6-get-by-hostname:
+
+The ``lease4-get-by-*``, ``lease6-get-by-*`` Commands
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+``lease4-get-by-*`` and ``lease6-get-by-*`` can be used to query the lease database and
+retrieve all existing leases matching a given feature (denoted by the ``*``). These
+can include a specified hardware address (IPv4
+only), ``client-id`` IPv4 only), ``duid`` (IPv6 only) identifiers, or hostname.
+
+An example ``lease4-get-by-hw-address`` command for getting IPv4 leases
+with a given hardware address is:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease4-get-by-hw-address",
+ "arguments": {
+ "hw-address": "08:08:08:08:08:08"
+ }
+ }
+
+An example of the ``lease6-get-by-hostname`` is:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease6-get-by-hostname",
+ "arguments": {
+ "hostname": "myhost.example.org"
+ }
+ }
+
+The ``by`` key is the only parameter. The returned response contains a detailed
+list of leases in the same format as ``lease4-get-all`` or ``lease6-get-all``. This list can be
+empty and is usually not large.
+
+.. _command-lease4-del:
+
+.. _command-lease6-del:
+
+The ``lease4-del``, ``lease6-del`` Commands
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+``lease4-del`` and ``lease6-del`` can be used to delete a lease from the lease database.
+There are two types of parameters these commands support, similar to the
+``lease4-get``and ``lease6-get`` commands: (``address``) for both v4 and v6, (``subnet-id``,
+``identifier-type``, ``identifier``) for v4, and (``subnet-id``, ``identifier-type``,
+``identifier``, ``type``, ``IAID``) for v6. The first type of query is used when the
+address (either IPv4 or IPv6) is known, but the details of the lease are
+not. One common use case is where an administrator wants a specified
+address to no longer be used. The second form of the command uses
+identifiers. For maximum flexibility, this interface uses identifiers as
+a pair of values: the type and the actual identifier. The currently
+supported identifiers are ``"hw-address"`` (IPv4 only), ``"client-id"`` (IPv4
+only), and ``"duid"`` (IPv6 only).
+
+An example command for deleting a lease by address is:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease4-del",
+ "arguments": {
+ "ip-address": "192.0.2.202"
+ }
+ }
+
+An example IPv4 lease deletion by ``"hw-address"`` is:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease4-del",
+ "arguments": {
+ "identifier": "08:08:08:08:08:08",
+ "identifier-type": "hw-address",
+ "subnet-id": 44
+ }
+ }
+
+
+Another parameter called ``update-ddns``, when ``true``, instructs the server to
+queue a request to ``kea-dhcp-ddns`` to remove DNS entries after the lease is
+successfully deleted if:
+
+- DDNS updating is enabled (i.e. ``"dhcp-ddns":{ "enable-updates": true }``).
+- The lease's hostname is not empty.
+- At least one of the lease's DNS direction flags (``fqdn_fwd`` or ``fqdn_rev``) is true.
+
+This parameter defaults to ``false``. An example of its use is shown below:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease4-del",
+ "arguments": {
+ "ip-address": "192.0.2.202",
+ "update-ddns": true
+ }
+ }
+
+
+``lease4-del`` and ``lease6-del`` return a result that indicates the outcome of the
+operation. It has one of the following values: 0 (success), 1 (error),
+or 3 (empty). The empty result means that a query has been completed
+properly, but the object (a lease, in this case) has not been found.
+
+.. _command-lease4-update:
+
+.. _command-lease6-update:
+
+The ``lease4-update``, ``lease6-update`` Commands
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+The ``lease4-update`` and ``lease6-update`` commands can be used to
+update existing leases. Since all lease database backends are indexed by
+IP addresses, it is not possible to update an address, but all other
+fields may be altered. If an address needs to be changed, please use
+``lease4-del``/``lease6-del`` followed by ``lease4-add``/``lease6-add``.
+
+The ``subnet-id`` parameter is optional. If not specified, or if the
+specified value is 0, Kea tries to determine its value by running a
+subnet-selection procedure. If specified, however, its value must match
+the existing subnet.
+
+The optional boolean parameter ``"force-create"`` specifies whether the
+lease should be created if it does not exist in the database. It defaults
+to ``false``, which indicates that the lease is not created if it does not
+exist. In such a case, an error is returned when trying to
+update a non-existing lease. If the ``"force-create"`` parameter is set to
+``true`` and the updated lease does not exist, the new lease is created as a
+result of receiving the ``lease4-update``/``lease6-update`` command.
+
+An example of a command to update an IPv4 lease is:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease4-update",
+ "arguments": {
+ "ip-address": "192.0.2.1",
+ "hostname": "newhostname.example.org",
+ "hw-address": "1a:1b:1c:1d:1e:1f",
+ "subnet-id": 44,
+ "force-create": true
+ }
+ }
+
+An example of a command to update an IPv6 lease is:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease6-update",
+ "arguments": {
+ "ip-address": "2001:db8::1",
+ "duid": "88:88:88:88:88:88:88:88",
+ "iaid": 7654321,
+ "hostname": "newhostname.example.org",
+ "subnet-id": 66,
+ "force-create": false
+ }
+ }
+
+.. _command-lease4-wipe:
+
+.. _command-lease6-wipe:
+
+The ``lease4-wipe``, ``lease6-wipe`` Commands
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+``lease4-wipe`` and ``lease6-wipe`` are designed to remove all leases
+associated with a given subnet. This administrative task is expected to
+be used when an existing subnet is being retired. The leases
+are not properly expired; no DNS updates are carried out, no log
+messages are created, and hooks are not called for the leases being
+removed.
+
+An example of ``lease4-wipe`` is:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease4-wipe",
+ "arguments": {
+ "subnet-id": 44
+ }
+ }
+
+An example of ``lease6-wipe`` is:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease6-wipe",
+ "arguments": {
+ "subnet-id": 66
+ }
+ }
+
+The commands return a text description of the number of leases removed,
+plus the status code 0 (success) if any leases were removed or 3 (empty)
+if there were no leases. Status code 1 (error) may be returned if the
+parameters are incorrect or some other exception is encountered.
+
+``subnet-id`` 0 has a special meaning; it tells Kea to delete leases from
+all configured subnets. Also, the ``subnet-id`` parameter may be omitted. If
+not specified, leases from all subnets are wiped.
+
+Note: currently only memfile lease storage supports this command.
+
+.. _command-lease4-resend-ddns:
+
+.. _command-lease6-resend-ddns:
+
+The ``lease4-resend-ddns``, ``lease6-resend-ddns`` Commands
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+``lease4-resend-ddns`` and ``lease6-resend-ddns`` can be used to generate
+a request to ``kea-dhcp-ddns`` to update the DNS entries for an existing
+lease. The desired lease is selected by a single parameter, ``"ip-address"``.
+For an update request to be generated, DDNS updating must be enabled
+and DNS entries must have already been made (or attempted) for the lease.
+In other words, all of the following must be true:
+
+- DDNS updating must be enabled (i.e. ``"dhcp-ddns":{ "enable-updates": true"}``).
+- The lease's hostname must not be empty.
+- At least one of the lease's DNS direction flags (``fqdn_fwd`` or ``fqdn_rev``) must be true.
+
+An example ``lease4-resend-ddns`` command for getting a lease using an IPv4
+address is:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease4-resend-ddns",
+ "arguments": {
+ "ip-address": "192.0.2.1"
+ }
+ }
+
+An example of the ``lease6-resend-ddns`` query is:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "command": "lease6-resend-ddns",
+ "arguments": {
+ "ip-address": "2001:db8:1::1"
+ }
+ }
+
+``lease4-resend-ddns`` and ``lease6-resend-ddns`` return an indication of the result of the operation.
+It has one of the following values: 0 (success), 1 (error), or 3 (empty). An empty
+result means that a query has been completed properly, but the object (a lease in
+this case) has not been found.
+
+A successful result does not mean that DNS has been successfully updated; it
+indicates that a request to update DNS has been successfully created and
+queued for transmission to ``kea-dhcp-ddns``.
+
+Here's an example of a result returned when the lease was found:
+
+::
+
+ {
+ "result": 0,
+ "text": "NCR generated for: 2001:db8:1::1, hostname: example.com."
+ }