Continuing the series on Internet history, fifteen years ago marked the creation of a standard for dynamically defining the network configuration of a machine. Building on earlier boot-strapping protocols, the dynamic host configuration protocol allowed machines to automatically obtain all of the configuration parameters needed to exchange packets with other hosts. With DHCP, it was no longer required to either manually configure machines with network configuration parameters or to manually configure networks to know about individual machines.
Adoption of DHCP took off because the protocol provided several key benefits to network administrators. In comparison, the older processes for configuring machines were labor intensive and error prone. DHCP provided a quick and cheap solution to several common problems.