Kendrick

DHCP and DNS are both important functions for a server, but they can conflict with each other. When DHCP is enabled, it will try to assign IP addresses to clients on the network.

If DNS is also enabled, it will try to resolve domain names to IP addresses. If DHCP and DNS conflict, one of the functions will be disabled.

To prevent this conflict, you can disable DHCP on the server and enable DNS. This will ensure that IP addresses are not assigned to clients and that domain names can be resolved to IP addresses.