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Special Forums IP Networking Strange network behaviour in Solaris 10 Post 302322155 by Spacerat on Wednesday 3rd of June 2009 03:08:55 AM
Old 06-03-2009
Strange network behaviour in Solaris 10

Hi folks

how can this be explained?

Cheers

Spacerat

----

tom@jumpstart:~$ cat /etc/resolv.conf
domain acceleris.ch
nameserver 192.168.21.230
tom@jumpstart:~$ nslookup Google 192.168.21.230
Server: 192.168.21.230
Address: 192.168.21.230#53

Non-authoritative answer:
Google canonical name = Google.
Google canonical name = Google.
Name: Google
Address: 74.125.77.147
Name: Google
Address: 74.125.77.104
Name: Google
Address: 74.125.77.99
Name: Google
Address: 74.125.77.105
Name: Google
Address: 74.125.77.106
Name: Google
Address: 74.125.77.103

tom@jumpstart:~$ ping Google
ping: unknown host Google
 

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oidentd_masq.conf(5)						File Formats Manual					      oidentd_masq.conf(5)

NAME
oidentd_masq.conf - oidentd IP masquerading/NAT configuration file. DESCRIPTION
If you are using IP masquerading or NAT, oidentd can optionally return a username for connections from other machines. Support for this is specified by calling oidentd with the -m (or --masq) flag and by creating an /etc/oidentd_masq.conf file. oidentd can also forward requests for an IP masqueraded connection to the machine from which connection originates by way of the -f option. This will only work if the host to which the connection is forwarded is running oidentd with the -P (proxy) flag, or if the host's ident daemon will return a valid reply regardless of the input supplied by and the address of the host requesting the info (some ident daemons for windows do this, maybe others). FORMAT
<IP Address|Hostname>[/<Mask>] <Ident Response> <System Type> The first field contains the IP address or the hostname of a machine that IP masquerades through the machine on which oidentd runs. The mask parameter can be either a network mask or a mask in CIDR notation. A mask of 24 is equivalent to 255.255.255.0, a mask of 16 is equivalent to 255.255.0.0, etc. The second field specifies the reply that oidentd will return for lookups to the host matching the IP address specified in the first param- eter. The third field specifies the operating system the machine matching the first parameter is running. EXAMPLES
<Host>[/<Mask>] <Ident Response> <System Type> 192.168.1.1 someone UNIX 192.168.1.2 noone WINDOWS 192.168.1.1/32 user1 UNIX 192.168.1.0/24 user3 UNIX 192.168.0.0/16 user4 UNIX somehost user5 UNIX 192.168.1.0/255.255.255.0 user6 UNIX AUTHOR
Ryan McCabe <ryan@numb.org> http://dev.ojnk.net SEE ALSO
oidentd(8) oidentd.conf(5) version 2.0.8 13 Jul 2003 oidentd_masq.conf(5)
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