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Full Discussion: uname -S
Operating Systems AIX uname -S Post 302102868 by dukessd on Sunday 14th of January 2007 08:19:11 PM
Old 01-14-2007
Probably not. It will depend to some extent on how you resolve hostnames. If you resolve locally, or the DNS server has not been updated, then telnet will still work, even if the host name has changed.
I don't think you will have a problem though, unless the system does not complete a normal reboot. Even then (if you have a hang or crash) you will probably get away with it.
I presume you didn't down or detach any ethernet interfaces, so the change never went into effect and the next time the system boots it will re-read the original hostname, so all should be OK.
 

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optisa(1)							   User Commands							 optisa(1)

NAME
optisa - determine which variant instruction set is optimal to use SYNOPSIS
optisa instruction_set... DESCRIPTION
optisa prints which instruction_set out of the ones specified in the command will perform best on this machine. In this case, ``best'' is defined by the order in which instruction set names are returned by isalist(1). Possible values for instruction_set are given in isalist(5). ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned: 0 One of the instruction_set values you specified is printed by this command. 1 There is no output; that is, this machine cannot use any instruction_set that you specified with the optisa command. SEE ALSO
isalist(1), uname(1), attributes(5), isalist(5) NOTES
optisa is preferable to uname -p or uname -m (see uname(1)) in determining which of several binary versions of a given program should be used on the given machine. SunOS 5.11 25 Jul 1997 optisa(1)
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