Not using DHCP relay per se. Just setting a DHCP forwarder address on the router so when a DHCP address hits the gateway it points to the correct host. This is just a requirement when running a DHCP host other than the gateway and should be part of every MaaS deployment unless someone somewhere is also using their MaaS controllers as Linux routers instead of hardware routers.
DHCP is also up and working just fine, and all hosts in my network (including the host that is PXE booting, it always gets 192.168.199.130) are getting DHCP addresses from the MaaS range I defined for this flat network.
Not using DHCP relay per se. Just setting a DHCP forwarder address on the router so when a DHCP address hits the gateway it points to the correct host. This is just a requirement when running a DHCP host other than the gateway and should be part of every MaaS deployment unless someone somewhere is also using their MaaS controllers as Linux routers instead of hardware routers.
DHCP is also up and working just fine, and all hosts in my network (including the host that is PXE booting, it always gets 192.168.199.130) are getting DHCP addresses from the MaaS range I defined for this flat network.