If you ascertain that the DHCP services are running on both the client and server computers but the error conditions described earlier persist, then the DHCP database is not available or has become corrupted. If a DHCP server fails for any reason, you can restore the database from the automatic backup files.
If the DHCP database has become corrupted, it is automatically restored from the DHCP backup directory specified in the Registry, as described later in this chapter.
For information about this parameter, see "Registry Parameters for DHCP Servers" later in this chapter.
If the backup database is also corrupted and you have an additional backup stored elsewhere, copy the most recent usable backup to the \DHCP working directory, and then restart the DHCP Server service.
Once you have restored the DHCP database using any of these methods, you need to reconcile the database to add entries for any leased addresses that are not in the restored database.