10-30-2007
find the IP's on the sever
Hi ,
I am working on AIx server which is connected to another network which is a stock market via leased line ,
From my side I connect to the server locally but what i need is to know the ip whic the server connect to the stock market how I can Know this ????
Thanks
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Guys,
I want to run a script located on a different server from my pc.
Let say the server has an IP of 1.1.10.2/16 and the script path is:
/home/user/bin/check.sh
The script scans for all available devices on the lan.
My pc has an IP of 1.1.15.4/16 and I can ping the sever and can... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: tony3101
3 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have two redhat linux server. i have created one script which contain some command that run on Local server as well as remote server.I am using this command to connect to remote server
ssh user1@192.x.x.x 'command'
but when i am running the script in local server it connecting to the server... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ranvijaidba
1 Replies
3. AIX
Hello Guys,
Unfortunately after look for it on entire www I did not find anyone that have made a tutorial how to make it works.
I'm using an AIX 5.3 as a nis client from a SUSE 1.0 server.
I can see the maps - ypcat passwd (so I can Bind server)
and I can su NIS users.
BUT I CAN... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: michelan
0 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Friends,
My requirement is - I have to FTP a list of files from one server to another sever. I am using following code :
ftp -i -n << EOF >> abc.txt
open $COM_FTP_RHOST
user $COM_FTP_USER $COM_FTP_PASSWORD
cd $COM_FTP_PATH ( some folder )
ls -ltr filename*
bye
EOF
After... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sree143reddy
1 Replies
5. AIX
Hi All,
We have a server at a client site running AIX 5.3, which we just up the RAM to 32GB, from initially 16GB (if I'm not mistaken).
This server is our Application server running J2EE applications on top of Oracle Internet Application Server. Recently we encountered one of the batch jobs... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: a_sim
12 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All,
I have totally two server. First server name is ABC which contains the file name is Sum.txt and Second server name is Sun here one file generate during the runtime.
Currently I am in First Server. Now, I need to compare the server one file (Sum.txt) with server two file.
If it... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: suresh01_apk
2 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Everyday my code will send 100's* of mails from linux server to outlook using*sendmail command .
I need to take a backup of those mails which are exactly sent from my linux server.
This is needed for backup purpose.
backuplocation is my local home dir.Is it possible to do this.
I dont have root... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohanalakshmi
4 Replies
8. BSD
I put this thread to shell and bsd, because I want to resolve this matter on bsd.
May somebody can explain to me how to ping a remote server, in unix. BTW the following code examples were tried on a linux system as well, with the same output, nothing. But on my bsd are not installed nmap neither... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: 1in10
4 Replies
9. Red Hat
Actually this is a Centos 6.x question, but I think it fits here.
I have a client that has a pretty beefy server that will be running all sorts of VMs once I unleash it to the developers. For several reasons, they would like to do a complete clone of the server as is right now, that is with just... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: xdawg
2 Replies
10. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
How do I install a LAMP server on a new installation of Debian 9 using the lalest versions of
AMP?
Here is what I have.
Corrections please.
MYSQL
apt-get install mysql-server mysql-client
You can verify the MySQL server status using command:
systemctl status mysql
-------
PHP7... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Meow613
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
nis_intro
nis_intro(7) Miscellaneous Information Manual nis_intro(7)
NAME
nis_intro - Network Information Service (NIS) introductory information
DESCRIPTION
The Network Information Service (NIS) is a distributed name service that allows participating hosts to share access to a common set of sys-
tem and network files. NIS allows the system administrator to manage these shared files on a single system.
NIS is intended for use in a secure environment only, where gateways do not allow outside Internet access to the NIS protocol.
NIS Maps
Information distributed by NIS is stored in database files called maps. Most of the NIS maps represent files that were traditionally
stored in the /etc directory. These files include the following: aliases group hosts netgroups networks passwd protocols rpc services
In a secure environment, you can run NIS in a secure mode, thereby creating secure and nonsecure versions of the NIS maps. See the Secu-
rity guide for more information.
You can also use NIS to distribute files used by Automount or AutoFS, or to distribute other user-defined files.
Each NIS map contains a set of keys and associated values. For example, as keys, the hosts map contains all host names on a network, and
as values, the corresponding Internet addresses. Each NIS map has a map name, used by programs to access data in the map.
NIS Domains
A named set of NIS maps is called a domain. A system's "domain name" or "NIS domain" corresponds to the set of NIS maps that the system
can access. You can think of an NIS domain as a set of systems that share the same set of NIS maps.
A system's domain name is set at the time the system is booted by the /sbin/init.d/nis script using an entry in the /etc/rc.config.common
file. System administrators can use the nissetup script to place entries in this file. The nissetup script is described in the Network
Administration manual.
You can determine your system's NIS domain using the domainname command. Refer to domainname(1). A domain name is required for retrieving
data from an NIS database.
NIS Client-Server Model
NIS follows the client-server model of distributed services. There are two types of NIS servers - master and slave. The master server
stores the master copy of the NIS maps for its domain; these are the only NIS maps that can be modified. Each domain has only one master
server.
Slave servers store copies of the master server's NIS maps. NIS slave servers can be spread throughout a network. Whenever an NIS map is
updated on the master server, the master propagates the changes to each slave server in its domain. If the master is unavailable for any
reason, the slave servers continue to make the NIS maps available to the NIS clients.
Clients are all of the systems that can access NIS maps. When a client requires NIS information, it makes a remote procedure call (RPC) to
one of the NIS servers to obtain the information.
NIS Data Storage
The data in NIS maps is stored as databases in dbm/ndbm, btree, or hash format.
For example, the NIS map for the /etc/hosts file in the domain market might be stored in these dbm/ndbm files: /var/yp/mar-
ket/hosts.byaddr.dir
/var/yp/market/hosts.byaddr.pag
/var/yp/market/hosts.byname.dir
/var/yp/market/hosts.byname.pag
The makedbm command takes an ASCII file such as /etc/hosts and converts it into dbm/ndbm files suitable for use by NIS. However, system
administrators use the Makefile script in the /var/yp directory to create NIS map files and specify file format. The Makefile script then
calls makedbm.
Refer to the Network Administration manual for details on the Makefile script, specifying different formats, and other NIS management
information.
RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: domainname(1), svcsetup(8), ypbind(8), yppasswdd(8), ypserv(8), ypxfr(8)
Files: svc.conf(4)
Network Administration delim off
nis_intro(7)