> On Sat, Oct 11, 2003 at 03:45:14PM -0500, Charles Howse wrote:
> > Hi,
> > I recently changed the hostname of one of my machines in
> /etc/rc.conf.
> > Now my uname -v output is still showing the old name.
> > I've run uname -a here so you can see the complete output,
> the -v stuff
> > comes a
> Charles Howse wrote:
> > Hi,
> > I recently changed the hostname of one of my machines in
> /etc/rc.conf.
> > Now my uname -v output is still showing the old name.
> > I've run uname -a here so you can see the complete output,
> the -v stuff
> > comes after the '#0:'
> > Will this change with a
> On Saturday, October 11, 2003, at 04:45 PM, Charles Howse wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> > I recently changed the hostname of one of my machines in
> /etc/rc.conf.
> > Now my uname -v output is still showing the old name.
> > I've run uname -a here so you can see the complete output,
> the -v stuff
> > co
On Sat, Oct 11, 2003 at 03:45:14PM -0500, Charles Howse wrote:
> Hi,
> I recently changed the hostname of one of my machines in /etc/rc.conf.
> Now my uname -v output is still showing the old name.
> I've run uname -a here so you can see the complete output, the -v stuff
> comes after the '#0:'
> W
Isn't that output the box it was compiled on and not the current name
of your host?
On Saturday, October 11, 2003, at 04:45 PM, Charles Howse wrote:
Hi,
I recently changed the hostname of one of my machines in /etc/rc.conf.
Now my uname -v output is still showing the old name.
I've run uname -a
Hi Charles,
'CUSTOM' is the name of the kernel you built. My machine is called huey, but the
build is called DUEY.
$ uname -a
FreeBSD huey.dekka.com 4.8-STABLE FreeBSD 4.8-STABLE #0: Fri Oct 10 03:02:30 PDT
2003
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/DUEY i386
Charles Howse wrote:
Hi,
I rece