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Operating Systems HP-UX Difference in netstat -a and -an output. Post 302341166 by ejdv on Wednesday 5th of August 2009 07:59:22 AM
Old 08-05-2009
No:

Code:
# nslookup ts15r135
Using /etc/hosts on:  nbsol152

looking up FILES
Name:    ts15r135
Address:  172.23.160.87

Stupid me :-( ; used 78 iso 87.
And 87 iso 78 for the other system !

Code:
# netstat -a | grep ts15r135
tcp        0      0  nbsol152.60377         ts15r135.23211          ESTABLISHED
# netstat -an | grep 172.23.160.87
tcp        0      0  135.246.39.152.60377   172.23.160.87.23211     ESTABLISHED

Thanks a lot !
 

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inet_type(4)                                                       File Formats                                                       inet_type(4)

NAME
inet_type - default Internet protocol type SYNOPSIS
/etc/default/inet_type DESCRIPTION
The inet_type file defines the default IP protocol to use. Currently this file is only used by the ifconfig(1M) and netstat(1M) commands. The inet_type file can contain a number of <variable>=<value> lines. Currently, the only variable defined is DEFAULT_IP, which can be assigned a value of IP_VERSION4, IP_VERSION6, or BOTH. The output displayed by the ifconfig and netstat commands can be controlled by the value of DEFAULT_IP set in inet_type file. By default, both commands display the IPv4 and IPv6 information available on the system. The user can choose to suppress display of IPv6 information by setting the value of DEFAULT_IP. The following shows the possible values for DEFAULT_IP and the resulting ifconfig and netstat output that will be displayed: IP_VERSION4 Displays only IPv4 related information. The output displayed is backward compatible with older versions of the ifconfig(1M) and netstat(1M) commands. IP_VERSION6 Displays both IPv4 and IPv6 related information for ifconfig and netstat. BOTH Displays both IPv4 and IPv6 related information for ifconfig and netstat. The command-line options to the ifconfig and netstat commands override the effect of DEFAULT_IP as set in the inet_type file. For example, even if the value of DEFAULT_IP is IP_VERSION4, the command example% ifconfig -a6 will display all IPv6 interfaces. EXAMPLES
Example 1: Suppressing IPv6 Related Output This is what the inet_type file must contain if you want to suppress IPv6 related output: DEFAULT_IP=IP_VERSION4 SEE ALSO
ifconfig(1M), netstat(1M) SunOS 5.10 16 Jun 1999 inet_type(4)
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