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Full Discussion: BIND and dig errors
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers BIND and dig errors Post 12016 by sam_pointer on Monday 17th of December 2001 09:57:39 AM
Old 12-17-2001
Data BIND and dig errors

Hi all, I'm running BIND 9.1.3 and the accompanying `dig and nslookup' on a vanilla Redhat 7.2 Linux box.

I've produced all of my Zone data and config files (I used h2n with some manual tweaks to do this, as some >= v8.2 BIND features aren't properly supported as far as I can see).

Im my resolv.conf I have I have the following 2 lines (the hostname is dns1a.company.com and it's IP address is 123.123.123.123):

domain company.com
namerserver 123.123.123.123

When I try to do a lookup, say`dig www.yahoo.com` I get the error message:

;; connection timed out; no servers could be reached

My question is this: is this error message refering to the fact that nslookup cannot find my newly-installed local named, or that it can't being querying *other* nameservers for information about www.yahoo.com

Any help would be appreciated. I'm here to learn, so hints would be helpful (although answers are always nice :-).

Thanks in advance... Sam.
 

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SCHEDCTL(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					       SCHEDCTL(8)

NAME
schedctl -- control scheduling of processes and threads SYNOPSIS
schedctl [-A cpus] [-C class] [-P pri] [-t lid] -p pid | command DESCRIPTION
The schedctl command can be used to control the scheduling of processes and threads. It also returns information about the current schedul- ing parameters of the process or thread. Only the super-user may change the scheduling parameters. schedctl can also be used to start a new command using the specified parameters. Available options: -A cpus Set of the processors on which process or thread should run, that is, affinity. Processors are defined as numbers (starting from zero) and separated by commas. A value of -1 is used to unset the affinity. -C class Scheduling class (policy), one of: SCHED_OTHER Time-sharing (TS) scheduling policy. The default policy in NetBSD. SCHED_FIFO First in, first out (FIFO) scheduling policy. SCHED_RR Round-robin scheduling policy. -P pri Priority for the process or thread. Value should be in the range from SCHED_PRI_MIN (0) to SCHED_PRI_MAX (63). Setting of prior- ity for the process or thread running at SCHED_OTHER policy is not allowed. -p pid The target process which will be affected. If the process has more than one thread, all of them will be affected. If -p is not given, a command to execute must be given on the command line. -t lid Thread in the specified process. If specified, only this thread in the process will be affected. May only be specified if -p is also given. EXAMPLES
Show scheduling information about the process whose ID is ``123'': # schedctl -p 123 Set the affinity to CPU 0 and CPU 1, policy to SCHED_RR, and priority to 63 for thread whose ID is ``1'' in process whose ID is ``123'': # schedctl -p 123 -t 1 -A 0,1 -C SCHED_RR -P 63 Run the top(1) command with real-time priority: # schedctl -C SCHED_FIFO top SEE ALSO
nice(1), getpriority(2), setpriority(2), psrset(8), renice(8) HISTORY
The schedctl command first appeared in NetBSD 5.0. BSD
March 21, 2011 BSD
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