DHCP Superscopes
The shared networks feature on ISC and Kea is called Superscopes in Micetro
For DHCPv6, superscopes only work for a Kea service. for DHCPv4 it’s then MS, ISC and Kea.
Creating Superscopes
Superscopes can be created and scopes added to them as a way to group scopes together.
Creating a new superscope can be done on the superscope subpage. When creating a superscope a name needs to be defined as well as choosing what server the superscope should exist on.
Viewing DHCPv6 Scopes
Unlike DHCPv4 scopes which display all the addresses within a scope, a DHCPv6 scope will only display addresses in use or which have been recently used. At the bottom of the view, you will see how many active IP addresses are being shown. If there is an IP address with the status of free, that IP address has recently been used. To see more information, select View History for that address.

New DHCP Scope
Note
Creating a scope on a Kea server configured for load balancing high availability, Micetro will automatically split the scope evenly between primary and secondary servers. See Kea DHCP High Availability.
This section describes how to create and edit DHCP scopes with the new DHCP Scope Creation Wizard.
Whenever you create a new scope, Micetro automatically checks whether the new scope conflicts with an existing scope or an IPAM range.
The Wizard has additional steps, or skips over some steps, depending on the type of DHCP server the scope is being created on, and whether the AD Sites and Subnets integration has been enabled.
To create a new scope on the MS DHCP server:
In Create action and select DHCP scope from the dropdown.
use the

Click Next.
Edit the options for the DHCP scope.
DHCP server: The DHCP server for the scope.
Enabled: If selected, the DHCP scope will start allocating IP addresses immediately. Clear this option if you want to configure the scope further.
Start/end of address pool: Adjust the first and last IP address in the pool.
Active Directory Site selection. If you have enabled AD Sites and Subnets, the Wizard will ask you which AD site the new DHCP Scope should be associated to.
Note
Leave it empty for no AD site.
Scope properties.
Summary. The changes the Wizard will perform are summarized here and applied once the user clicks “Finish”.
Save comment.
New DHCPv6 Scope
Micetro supports DHCPv6 for Microsoft and Kea DHCP
Under IPAM click on Create and select DHCP Scope..
Enter the network information and click Next.
Enter the DHCP Server name and the preference, and put a check next to Enabled if you’d like to enable this scope on this server. Click Next.
Note
The preference value is a new parameter required by Microsoft for DHCPv6 scopes. If the scope is assigned to multiple servers, the lowest preference assignment will be selected by the DHCP client
Enter the title as an identifier for this scope as well as the description and click Next.
Verify the information is correct and click Finish.
Manage DHCPv6 Exclusions
When managing exclusions within a DHCPv6 pool it is possible to specify a percentage of a DHCPv6 scope rather than specifying a From address and To address
Select a DHCP scope while under IPAM >> DHCP scopes.
Click Action, and then select Manage DHCP Exclusions.
Click Add Exclusion.
A new pop up will appear. Choose to either create the exclusion range by Manual Entry or Percentage.
If you choose manual entry, enter the From address and To address for the range you’d like to exclude from the DHCP scope.
If you choose percentage, drag the percentage bar to the correct percentage of addresses you’d like to exclude, and enter a From address only.

Note
If the exclusion range doesn’t have the space to accomodate the percentage of IP addresses specified, it will not allow you to add this exclusion range until you pick an appropriate From address or lower the percentage.
Reconcile Scopes
Note
Applies to MS DHCP Servers only.
Use this function to fix inconsistencies between information in the registry and the DHCP database.
Go to the IPAM page.
Select DHCP Scopes
Select one or multiple DHCP Scopes from Microsoft Servers
Click on the ellipsis (or meatball) menu on the scope(s).
Click on Reconcile DHCP Scopes
If there are inconsistencies, a list will be presented. Click Fix to fix the inconsistincies.

For more information see the Microsoft documentation.
Other Functions
At any time, you can modify the properties for a scope. Simply locate the item, and from the Row menu (…) select Edit network properties. For split scopes, the scope contents can be examined individually on each server.
Deleting a Lease
To delete a lease in a DHCP scope, do the following:
Open the scope containing the lease you want to delete.
Select the lease and on the Row menu (…) select Release DHCP lease or use .
IP Address Details
The IP Address details window contains all information pertaining to an IP Address in Micetro, including DNS records, DHCP reservations, and custom properties. To access the IP address details select an IP address in the DHCP scope dialog, and all information is displayed in the Inspector, including information on any DNS and DHCP data associated with the IP address. A reservation can be created by clicking the + button in the Related DHCP data section of the Inspector.
Renaming a Scope
You can change the name and/or description of a scope in Micetro.
Locate and select the DHCP Scope you want to rename.
On the Row menu (…), select Edit network properties.
Enter the Title, and any other value you wish to change.
Click Save.
Split Scopes in Load Balancing Mode
When creating scopes on Kea servers configured in load balancing mode for high availability, Micetro will split the available pool evenly between primary and secondary servers.

Managing Split Scopes for DHCPv6
Select a DHCPv6 scope under IPAM >> DHCP Scopes
Click Action, and then Manage Scope Instances
In the drop-down menu select a second server to manage the DHCP scope, and then click Add. Enable the servers on which the split-scope should reside.
Note
You can change the preference of the servers by clicking and dragging on the hamburger icon (three lines to the left of the server) to change the order of the servers. The second server will always have a preference of the First Server Preference + 1 and each additional server will increment by 1.
Click Save
On the same scope, click the Action menu and then select Manage DHCP Exclusions
Click Add Exclusion for the first server and select the percentage for which you’d like to exclude from the first server and click Add
Click Add Exclusion for the second server and select the percentage for which you’d like to exclude from the second server and click Add
Click Save
Editing DHCP Options
Note
DHCPv4 and DHCPv6 scopes inherit DHCP and DDNS Options from the parent DHCP server. DHCPv4 and DHCPv6 reservation inherit DHCP and DDNS options from the DHCP scope. However, these options may be changed by editing the options for the specific scope or reservation.
Viewing the configured DHCP options for a DHCP scope
Select the DHCP scope in the networks list.
On the Action menu, select Edit scope options. You can also select this option on the Row menu (…).
A dialog box is displayed. Note that in order to see the options that have inherited values, you need to select the Show inherited options checkbox.
Adding a New DHCP Option
Removing a DHCP Option
Hovering over an option in the Edit Scope dialog box will display a trash can icon to the right of the option.
Clicking the trash can will remove the option.
HEX and ASCII Representation
Some DHCP options, such as DHCP option 43 (Vendor specific info) require the value to be in HEX format. In this case the UI offers the value to be viewed both as HEX and ASCII by selecting each option in tabs above the field, as seen in the figure below.
