Hallo Andreas, habe es noch einmal anders versucht...jetzt startet DHCP bekomme aber noch ein: ct 2 05:05:13 linux dhcpd: No subnet declaration for ath0 (192.168.3.1). Oct 2 05:05:13 linux dhcpd: ** Ignoring requests on ath0. If this is not what Oct 2 05:05:13 linux dhcpd: you want, please write a subnet declaration Oct 2 05:05:13 linux dhcpd: in your dhcpd.conf file for the network segment Oct 2 05:05:13 linux dhcpd: to which interface ath0 is attached. ** Oct 2 05:05:13 linux dhcpd: Oct 2 05:05:13 linux dhcpd: Listening on Socket/eth0/192.168.0.0/24 Oct 2 05:05:13 linux dhcpd: Sending on Socket/eth0/192.168.0.0/24 Oct 2 05:05:13 linux dhcpd: Oct 2 05:05:13 linux dhcpd: No subnet declaration for eth2 (192.168.2.1). Oct 2 05:05:13 linux dhcpd: ** Ignoring requests on eth2. If this is not what Oct 2 05:05:13 linux dhcpd: you want, please write a subnet declaration Oct 2 05:05:13 linux dhcpd: in your dhcpd.conf file for the network segment Oct 2 05:05:13 linux dhcpd: to which interface eth2 is attached. ** Oct 2 05:05:13 linux dhcpd: Oct 2 05:05:13 linux dhcpd: Sending on Socket/fallback/fallback-net hier meine dhcp.conf ddns-update-style none; ddns-updates off; default-lease-time 3600; log-facility local7; max-lease-time 7200; subnet 192.168.0.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 { option domain-name "example.netz"; option domain-name-servers 192.168.0.1; option routers 192.168.0.1; range 192.168.0.40 192.168.0.70; } Wie binde ich an die anderen beiden Netze einen anderen Adressrahmen? einfach nur { option domain-name "example.netz"; option domain-name-servers 192.168.0.1; option routers 192.168.0.1; range 192.168.0.40 192.168.0.70; } kopieren und die 0 durch z.B. 1 dann 2 ersetzen? G. Roland