O /etc/hostname pode conter mais de uma entrada?
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Ate aonde eu lembro sim
Em 30/11/2014 09:44, Vitor Hugo vitorhug...@hotmail.com escreveu:
O /etc/hostname pode conter mais de uma entrada?
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Cara, eu nuca utilizei mais de uma, até porque o arquivo é para determinar
o seu hostname, no caso qual o motivo que te levaria a ter mais de uma
entrada no /etc/hostname ?
2014-11-30 9:53 GMT-02:00 Márcio Pedroso sarrafocapoe...@gmail.com:
Ate aonde eu lembro sim
Em 30/11/2014 09:44, Vitor
presciso de dois nomes para o mesmo host ns1 e ns2
On 30-11-2014 10:45, Rodrigo Cunha wrote:
Cara, eu nuca utilizei mais de uma, até porque o arquivo é para
determinar o seu hostname, no caso qual o motivo que te levaria a ter
mais de uma entrada no /etc/hostname ?
2014-11-30 9:53 GMT-02:00
Sim, o Sr. pode ter qtas entradas o Sr precisar no /etc/hostname .
A primera é a verdadeira , equivalente ao cname ( canonical name )
Cada nova entrada ocupará uma nova linha, no mesmo formato da primeira .
E cada uma das entradas será considerada como sen um alias ( apelido )
Mas do ponto de
, o Sr. pode ter qtas entradas o Sr precisar no /etc/hostname .
A primera é a verdadeira , equivalente ao cname ( canonical name )
Cada nova entrada ocupará uma nova linha, no mesmo formato da primeira .
E cada uma das entradas será considerada como sen um alias ( apelido )
Mas do ponto de vista
hostname, no caso qual o motivo que te levaria a
ter mais de uma entrada no /etc/hostname ?
2014-11-30 9:53 GMT-02:00 Márcio Pedroso sarrafocapoe...@gmail.com
mailto:sarrafocapoe...@gmail.com:
Ate aonde eu lembro sim
Em 30/11/2014 09:44, Vitor Hugo vitorhug...@hotmail.com
...@hotmail.com wrote:
presciso de dois nomes para o mesmo host ns1 e ns2
On 30-11-2014 10:45, Rodrigo Cunha wrote:
Cara, eu nuca utilizei mais de uma, até porque o arquivo é para
determinar o seu hostname, no caso qual o motivo que te levaria a
ter mais de uma entrada no /etc/hostname
estou configurando dns primario e secundario porem o secundario fica em
outro servidor em outra rede em outro pais
entao estou definindo ns2 para outro ip no /etc/hostname
ns1 ip da maquina dns master
ns2 ip outro pais dns slave
On 30-11-2014 20:46, Rodrigo Cunha wrote:
ns1 e ns2, seriam
Então isso não tem nada a ver com o /etc/hostname .. é só no /etc/hosts
mesmo.
/etc/hostname é só o nome da máquina corrente, para mudar DNS é no
/etc/hosts
Diego Rabatone Oliveira
diraol(arroba)diraol(ponto)eng(ponto)br
Identica: (@diraol) http://identi.ca
isso é no /etc/hosts
ex em laboratorio (ips privados):
192.168.1.1 ns1
192.168.1.2 ns2
Em 30 de novembro de 2014 20:59, Diego Rabatone dir...@diraol.eng.br
escreveu:
Então isso não tem nada a ver com o /etc/hostname .. é só no
/etc/hosts mesmo.
/etc/hostname é só o nome da máquina
I have been trying to find out the exact and proper way to set the host and
domain name on Debian and it's clear as mud. Searching the internet gives all
sorts of conflicting answers.
First, I thought the way to do it was to put the FQDN in /etc/hostname. Then I
ended up
On Fri, 31 Aug 2007, Jonathan Wilson wrote:
Can anyone who /knows/ tell me what the proper officially correct ways of
setting the hostname and the FQDN are, please?
Thanks,
JW
--
in /etc/hostname :
myhostname
in /etc/hosts:
10.0.0.120 myhostname.mydomain.com myhostname
set
more than one FQDN.
The host name is usually set once at system startup in
/etc/rc.d/rc.inet1 or /etc/init.d/boot (normally by reading the
contents of a file which contains the host name, e.g. /etc/hostname)
Those first 2 files don't exist on Debian Etch. And thought it says it
usually
Way to synch both of these files?
Is there a real reason to do so?
Note that /etc/hostname must not represent the name on the current network.
This is even impossible at times where more than one network is attached.
I don't understand why the hostname file must not represent the name
reason to do so?
Note that /etc/hostname must not represent the name on the current network.
This is even impossible at times where more than one network is attached.
HS
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That's what I had to do. I use m4 to create the dhclient.conf file on
boot.
Thanks for the info. What is m4?
On Tue, May 16, 2006 at 08:40:09PM -0500, Grant Thomas wrote:
Quick question about the two files mentioned above.
If I change my hostname, I also have to change a line in
/etc/dhclient.conf to update my hostname on the network.
Is there a Debian Way to synch both of these files?
Or
Quick question about the two files mentioned above.
If I change my hostname, I also have to change a line in
/etc/dhclient.conf to update my hostname on the network.
Is there a Debian Way to synch both of these files?
Or should I create a script that creates the /etc/dhclient.conf at
boot
- Original Message -
From: Iñaki
En ocasiones he tenido que cambiar el /etc/hostname pero si a continuación
hago ping 127.0.0.1 me sigue saliendo el nombre anterior de mi máquina.
Incluso después de reiniciar el servicio de red.
¿Qué debo reiniciar o hacer para que los cambios en /etc
En ocasiones he tenido que cambiar el /etc/hostname pero si a continuación
hago ping 127.0.0.1 me sigue saliendo el nombre anterior de mi máquina.
Incluso después de reiniciar el servicio de red.
¿Qué debo reiniciar o hacer para que los cambios en /etc/hostname tengan
efecto al instante? (no me
On 22/02/2006 16:35, Iñaki wrote:
En ocasiones he tenido que cambiar el /etc/hostname pero si a continuación
hago ping 127.0.0.1 me sigue saliendo el nombre anterior de mi máquina.
Incluso después de reiniciar el servicio de red.
¿Qué debo reiniciar o hacer para que los cambios en /etc
# /bin/hostname -F /etc/hostname
La Voluntad es el unico motor de nuestros logros
Mstaaravin /
Iñaki escribió:
En ocasiones he tenido que cambiar el /etc/hostname pero si a continuación
hago ping 127.0.0.1 me sigue saliendo el nombre anterior de mi máquina.
Incluso después de reiniciar el
El Miércoles, 22 de Febrero de 2006 21:33, Arlequín escribió:
On 22/02/2006 16:35, Iñaki wrote:
En ocasiones he tenido que cambiar el /etc/hostname pero si a
continuación hago ping 127.0.0.1 me sigue saliendo el nombre anterior
de mi máquina. Incluso después de reiniciar el servicio de red
El Miércoles, 22 de Febrero de 2006 20:39, Carlos Miranda - Mstaaravin /
escribió:
# /bin/hostname -F /etc/hostname
Ok, muchas gracias.
La Voluntad es el unico motor de nuestros logros
Mstaaravin /
Iñaki escribió:
En ocasiones he tenido que cambiar el /etc/hostname pero si
David Fokkema wrote:
On Mon, Jun 21, 2004 at 10:33:06PM +1000, Darryl Luff wrote:
Tom Allison wrote:
My /etc/hostname file contains only the machine name and not the FQDN of
the machine.
This is causing problems with procmail, squirrelmail and probably 50
other things out there.
How do I set
Tom Allison wrote:
My /etc/hostname file contains only the machine name and not the FQDN of
the machine.
This is causing problems with procmail, squirrelmail and probably 50
other things out there.
How do I set this once and for all?
And should it be a FQDN or just the machine name?
I put both
On Mon, Jun 21, 2004 at 10:33:06PM +1000, Darryl Luff wrote:
Tom Allison wrote:
My /etc/hostname file contains only the machine name and not the FQDN of
the machine.
This is causing problems with procmail, squirrelmail and probably 50
other things out there.
How do I set this once
Tom Allison wrote:
My /etc/hostname file contains only the machine name and not the FQDN
of the machine.
This is causing problems with procmail, squirrelmail and probably 50
other things out there.
How do I set this once and for all?
And should it be a FQDN or just the machine name?
I'm
* Tom Allison ([EMAIL PROTECTED])[20040620 19:41]:
My /etc/hostname file contains only the machine name and not the FQDN
of the machine.
This is causing problems with procmail, squirrelmail and probably 50
other things out there.
How do I set this once and for all?
And should it be a FQDN
My /etc/hostname file contains only the machine name and not the FQDN of
the machine.
This is causing problems with procmail, squirrelmail and probably 50
other things out there.
How do I set this once and for all?
And should it be a FQDN or just the machine name?
I'm actually thinking
Am Dienstag, 8. Juni 2004 10:56 schrieb Andreas Kroschel:
* Michael Hierweck:
[...]
Dafür benötigst Du einen lokalen Nameserver, der mit dem DHCP-Server
spricht. Für dhcp3 und bind9 habe ich die nötige Konfiguration beisammen
und kann sie bei Interesse posten.
Au ja, mir bitte auch zwei!
* Peter Baumgartner:
Dafür benötigst Du einen lokalen Nameserver, der mit dem DHCP-Server
spricht. Für dhcp3 und bind9 habe ich die nötige Konfiguration beisammen
und kann sie bei Interesse posten.
Au ja, mir bitte auch zwei!
(den Link unten werde ich trotzdem durchsehen) ;-)
Der Link
hinsichtlich verschiedener Dateien,
in den der hostname üblicherweise fest einkodiert ist, insbesondere der
/etc/hostname?
Ich suche dafür eigentlich keinen wilden Hack per selbst gebautem
init-Skript, sondern den debian-way
Viele Grüße
Michael
--
Michael Hierweck
EDV-Serviceteam Werthmann
* Michael Hierweck:
ich habe eine Frage zum Setzen des Hostnames bei der Benutzung von dhcp
und dns. Da die Clients gelegentlich ihre IP-Adresse wechseln (beim
Booten natürlich), kann der Hostname erst nach der Initialisierung des
Netzwerks bestimmt werden.
Dafür benötigst Du einen
Andreas Kroschel wrote:
* Michael Hierweck:
ich habe eine Frage zum Setzen des Hostnames bei der Benutzung von dhcp
und dns. Da die Clients gelegentlich ihre IP-Adresse wechseln (beim
Booten natürlich), kann der Hostname erst nach der Initialisierung des
Netzwerks bestimmt werden.
Dafür
* Michael Hierweck:
Das wäre nett; ich habe zwar dhcp2 und bind9, aber ggf. könnte ich auch
auf 3 wechseln...
Ich habe doch noch den Link gefunden, nach dem ich es seinerzeit
eingerichtet hatte: http://www.mattfoster.clara.co.uk/ddns.htm. Ist
eventuell aussagekräftiger als die bloßen
I've just noticed that hostname doesn't read /etc/hostname when called with
the command hostname --file /etc/hostname. This may be because I'm using
kernel 2.2.10 in slink. I've had to modify /etc/rcS/d/S40hostname.sh to
make it work.
Anthony
--
Anthony Campbell - running Linux Debian 2.1
On Mon, Nov 17, 1997 at 06:18:34PM +0100, Peter Prohaska wrote:
do I have to put the FQDN in here?
In /etc/hostname, you just have to put the machine name, not the FQDN, eg
machine.
And where is that information used for if I've got that /etc/hosts file
to handle local lookups.
/etc/hosts
Peter Prohaska writes:
do I have to put the FQDN in [/etc/hostname]?
No.
And where is that information used for if I've got that /etc/hosts file
to handle local lookups.
It tells your machine what its own name is.
If I have two interfaces with different IP-adds, it is also possible
hi,
do I have to put the FQDN in here?
And where is that information used for if I've got that /etc/hosts file
to handle local lookups.
If I have two inferfaces with different IP-adds, it is also possible that
my host is known with two different names, isn't it? So whats his hostname
then?
. Now, I changed
/etc/hostname
to hold my full host name, and lprm works. The question is, as I
remember a similar posting in the past about talk problems:
-- What exactly has to be now in /etc/hostname? Is
-- my correction correct or is lpr still buggy at
-- that point
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