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Operating Systems Solaris Cannot boot in single-user mode Post 302312179 by StarSol on Thursday 30th of April 2009 02:29:22 PM
Old 04-30-2009
Quote:
Originally Posted by incredible
Is it a Solaris 10? new setup?
By the way, any changes made to /etc/hosts and /etc/nsswitch.conf files?
whats the patch level of the system? You have have configured for any DNS, remove it and reboot and see again.. looks familiar Smilie
This is Solaris 8

#uname -a
SunOS greenwood 5.8 Generic_117350-45 sun4u sparc SUNW,Netra-240
# cat /etc/release
Solaris 8 2/04 s28s_hw4wos_05a SPARC
Copyright 2004 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Assembled 08 January 2004

Nothing has changed to /etc/hosts and /etc/nsswitch.conf and no DNS configured.
 

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NSS-MYHOSTNAME(8)						  nss-myhostname						 NSS-MYHOSTNAME(8)

NAME
nss-myhostname - Provide hostname resolution for the locally configured system hostname. SYNOPSIS
nss-myhostname.la DESCRIPTION
nss-myhostname is a plugin for the GNU Name Service Switch (NSS) functionality of the GNU C Library (glibc) providing hostname resolution for the locally configured system hostname as returned by gethostname(2). Various software relies on an always-resolvable local hostname. When using dynamic hostnames, this is usually achieved by patching /etc/hosts at the same time as changing the host name. This however is not ideal since it requires a writable /etc file system and is fragile because the file might be edited by the administrator at the same time. nss-myhostname simply returns all locally configured public IP addresses, or, if none are configured, the IPv4 address 127.0.0.2 (which is on the local loopback) and the IPv6 address ::1 (which is the local host) for whatever system hostname is configured locally. Patching /etc/hosts is thus no longer necessary. To activate the NSS modules, myhostname has to be added to the line starting with "hosts:" in /etc/nsswitch.conf It is recommended to put myhostname last in the nsswitch.conf line to make sure that this mapping is only used as fallback, and any DNS or /etc/hosts based mapping takes precedence. EXAMPLE
# /etc/nsswitch.conf passwd: compat group: compat shadow: compat hosts: files dns myhostname networks: files protocols: db files services: db files ethers: db files rpc: db files netgroup: nis To test, use glibc's getent tool: $ getent ahosts `hostname` ::1 STREAM omega ::1 DGRAM ::1 RAW 127.0.0.2 STREAM 127.0.0.2 DGRAM 127.0.0.2 RAW In this case the local hostname is omega. SEE ALSO
systemd(1), systemd-logind.service(8), logind.conf(5), loginctl(1), pam.conf(5), pam.d(5), pam(8), pam_loginuid(8) systemd 208 NSS-MYHOSTNAME(8)
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