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Full Discussion: Mac OS X
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Mac OS X Post 18132 by chenly on Monday 25th of March 2002 01:05:54 AM
Old 03-25-2002
Computer Clarification of loadc's post

OS X is Darwin underneath, which is to say that it employs the standard BSD UNIX networking stack. NetInfo is an application program which comes from NextStep/OpenStep and is defined by Apple thusly:

NetInfo is a directory system that is built into computers running Mac OS X and Mac OS X Server. It facilitates management of administrative information used by Mac OS X computers. For example, NetInfo lets you centralize information about users, printers, servers, and other network devices so that all Mac OS X computers on your network, or only some of them, can have access to it. It helps you set up and manage home directories for Mac OS X users on multiple, integrated Mac OS X Server systems. And it simplifies day-to-day management of administrative information by letting you upgrade information that's used across the network in one central place. For more information on NetInfo, see the document titled "Understanding and Using NetInfo," available at www.apple.com/macosx/server.
 

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NIBINDD(8)						      System Manager's Manual							NIBINDD(8)

NAME
nibindd - NetInfo binder SYNOPSIS
nibindd DESCRIPTION
The nibindd daemon is responsible for finding, creating and destroying NetInfo (netinfod(8)) servers. When it starts up, it reads the directory /etc/netinfo for directories with the extension ``.nidb'' and starts up a netinfod server for each NetInfo database it finds. If nibindd is sent a hangup signal, SIGHUP, it kills all running netinfod processes and rebinds the NetInfo domain hierarchy (note that this does not affect the connections established by lookupd(8)). This is useful for getting the system to conform to new network configuration changes without rebooting. nibindd writes a file with its process ID number (pid file) in /var/run/nibindd.pid. The nibindd daemon will automatically destroy the registration for a netinfod server if it disappears for any reason. It will take the netinfod servers down if it is shut down by sending it a terminate signal, SIGTERM. nidomain(8) is the user interface to nibindd. FILES
/etc/netinfo /var/run/nibindd.pid SEE ALSO
netinfod(8), nidomain(8), lookupd(8) Apple Computer, Inc. March 30, 1998 NIBINDD(8)
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