Thanks, Brian. It looks like it was a host name problem. And I have correct that. It works well.
Regards, Eric On Tue, Jan 4, 2011 at 8:17 PM, Brian Candler <[email protected]> wrote: > On Tue, Jan 04, 2011 at 07:31:37PM +0800, Lee Eric wrote: >> So how do I know what client/server gets the idea of the server host >> name? It looks like reverse map works well and they can get the same >> IP/Address. > > On the server, type "hostname". If it returns anything other than > ns.herdingcat.internal, correct it. Depending on your O/S this may be > something like > > # echo "ns.herdingcat.internal" >/etc/hostname > # hostname ns.herdingcat.internal > > On both the client and server, check that > > $ dig ns.herdingcat.internal > $ dig -x 172.16.14.1 > > give the right results (names maps to IP, and IP maps to name). > > Check /etc/hosts on both machines. Either there should be no entry for this > box, or if there is one, the FQDN should be the first listed name. > > 172.16.14.1 ns.herdingcat.internal # OK > 172.16.14.1 ns.herdingcat.internal ns # OK > 172.16.14.1 ns ns.herdingcat.internal # WRONG > > Regards, > > Brian. > ________________________________________________ Kerberos mailing list [email protected] https://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/kerberos
