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Full Discussion: What The World Needs Now...
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? What The World Needs Now... Post 302290272 by sparker652 on Sunday 22nd of February 2009 10:34:26 PM
Old 02-22-2009
I can see that the winner is less Polution.

So the enviro nuts continue to brain wash us!

Less Government and we'll have less to worry about in terms of what we need!!
 

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serialports(4)						     Sun Cluster File Formats						    serialports(4)

NAME
serialports - name to serial port database SYNOPSIS
/etc/serialports serialports NIS or NIS+ maps DESCRIPTION
The serialports database maps a name to a server name and TCP port number that represents the serial port connected to the specified termi- nal server host. The database is typically used to map host names to their consoles, but may also be used to provide access to printers, modems, and the like. The mapping is used when the service is being provided by a network based terminal concentrator. For each name a sin- gle line should be present with the following information: host-name concentrator-hostname tcp-port-number Items are separated by any number of blanks or TAB characters. A pound sign (#)indicates the beginning of a comment. Characters between the pound sign and the end of the line are not interpreted by routines that search the file. This information is used by the cconsole or cssh command to establish connection to a group of consoles of a cluster of network hosts. The names that are used in this database must be host names, as used in the /etc/inet/hosts database. To support Secure Shell connections to node consoles through the cssh command, specify in the /etc/serialports file the name of the con- sole-access device and the Secure Shell port number for each node. If you use the default Secure Shell configuration on the console-access device, specify port number 22. For E10000 nodes, the entries are different. This is because E10000 uses netcon for console purposes, which operates over a network and executes on the SSP. The following is the generic format for the entry. hostname SSPname 23 The database is available from either the NIS or NIS+ maps or a local file. Lookup order is specified by the serialports entry in the /etc/nsswitch.conf file, if present. If no search order is specified, the default order is nis files. EXAMPLES
Example 1 A Sample /etc/serialports File The following is an example /etc/serialports file: # Network host to port database # NFS server cluster mercury planets-tc 5001 venus planets-tc 5002 # E10000 server cluster cashews nuts-ssp-1 23 pecans nuts-ssp-2 23 Example 2 A Sample /etc/nsswitch.conf File Entry The following is a typical /etc/nsswitch.conf entry: serialports: nis files FILES
/etc/serialports /etc/nsswitch.conf ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWscdev | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Uncommitted | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
cconsole(1M), chosts(1M), cports(1M), cssh(1M), clusters(4), nsswitch.conf(4), attributes(5) Sun Cluster 3.2 8 Sep 2007 serialports(4)
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