 In this video, we're going to install and configure a DHCP server on Windows Server 2022. We start here in Windows Admin Center connected to a server core machine that is configured already as a domain controller and a DNS server. Important to note here, I've got a remote connection to this server core machine. I scroll down to roles and features, I select the DHCP server role, I select install, it tells me the dependencies. I say you can reboot the server if you need to. I click yes. Now, it doesn't require a reboot and the server role is actually installed. The next thing I do is I scroll up here and I can't see a DHCP item. What I need to do is install the DHCP Windows Admin Center extension. I select it and I click install. I then reconnect and I can use that extension. We see here that I need to install the DHCP R-SAT tools. I select that and that installs on my Windows Admin Center server. The next thing I need to do is I need to make a PowerShell connection because when you install DHCP, you actually have to authorize the DHCP server in Active Directory. I do that with the add DHCP server in DC commandlet and specify the IP address of the DHCP server. That DHCP server is now authorized, so I can go back to Windows Admin Center. I scroll back up and I select the DHCP blade and I'm going to create a new scope. I'll give the name of the scope as TALWIN scope. I'll put the starting IP address is 172.16.0.100 and the end address is 172.16.0.200. I set the DHCP subnet mask as 255.255.255.0 and then I add the gateway as 172.16.0.1. I'm going to set my lease to eight hours and I just provide a scope description. I click create and it goes and creates the scope. Now, once that scope's created, I can view it in Windows Admin Center. One of the things that you'll notice is that Windows Admin Center, while it'll allow me to create a scope, doesn't actually allow me at the moment to set scope options. So to set scope options, what I'm going to do is I'm going to remote PowerShell through Windows Admin Center back to the DHCP server. I'm going to view the scopes and I can see the one I've just created. I'm then going to configure the DNS options for that scope using PowerShell and set one of them as 172.16.0.50 and the other one as 1.1.1.1.1. And I can use PowerShell to check that, but sometimes it's easier to check using the old school tools. So I open up the DHCP console, I connect to that server and when I connect to that server using the old DHCP console, I can see the IPv4 scopes, I can see the scope I created and I can see the scope options there. So Windows Admin Center at the moment, you can certainly use it to install DHCP. You'll have to authorize it using PowerShell and you can't configure scope options, but those options will be coming. Anyway, in this demonstration, you saw me how to use Windows Admin Center to install and configure DHCP on Windows Server 2022.