IP theft
An IP Theft feature is a wireless controller security mechanism that
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detects duplicate IP address usage among connected clients
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assigns precedence to clients based on a defined preference order, and
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blocks or excludes clients attempting to use IP addresses already assigned to others.
The IP Theft feature is enabled by default on the controller. The controller also uses the preference level of clients, including new and existing ones in the database, to report IP theft. The preference level refers to the source of learning, such as Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP), Address Resolution Protocol (ARP), or analysis of the IP data packet to determine the client’s IP address. Wired clients always receive a higher preference level. If a wireless client tries to use an IP address assigned to a wired client, the controller marks it as a theft attempt.
![]() Note |
Some devices might use distinct MAC addresses but share the same IPv6 link-local address on different WLANs. If devices switch WLANs when they are not in range of the APs, an IP theft event is triggered. Lower the idle timeout for devices to prevent this situation. When devices are out of range of the APs, the idle timeout takes effect. The controller removes outdated entries in the initial WLAN. |
The order of preference for IPv4 clients are:
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DHCPv4
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ARP
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Data packets
The order of preference for IPv6 clients are:
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DHCPv6
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NDP
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Data packets
![]() Note |
Static wired clients receive a higher preference level than DHCP-assigned clients. |