Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Modifying a file without changing inode number Post 302459992 by sathishkmrv on Tuesday 5th of October 2010 09:50:06 PM
Old 10-05-2010
Modifying a file without changing inode number

Thank you very much.
This resolves my issue.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Filesystems, Disks and Memory

Inode number

as kernel keeps track of user activities on a file by its INODE number and I node table . what is the structure of Inode table. and where does this Inode table mapped into?user space or kernel space? is the Inode Number is fixed for a file till its deletion? thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: compbug
1 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Changing Line Number of a File

Example: O o x What I would like to do is to rename the first column of the above file without affecting the format. The output should look like the following: Output: O o x #! /bin/ksh cd $HOME/lib/.Lee #nl = no. of lines. nl=`grep 'X' ex | wc -l` #ln = line no. ln=1 (17 Replies)
Discussion started by: ilak1008
17 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

how to find out pathname from inode number

Hi all when I execute pmap command on one of my daemon process, I am able to see the following output. Address Kbytes RSS Anon Locked Mode Mapped File 00010000 40 40 - - r-x-- irs026bmd 00028000 56 56 16 - rwx-- irs026bmd 00036000... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: axes
3 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Number of Inode on a disk

How we can know number of inode present in my Disk including free and occupied. Is there any tool or program to know how much free inode are there in inode free list . (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mr_deb
2 Replies

5. Filesystems, Disks and Memory

Recreating a deleted hardlink to a file if I know the inode number

At risk of twisting the rules to nearly the point of breaking (if you think this goes too far mods, I apologise and accept that this should be deleted), I'm hoping someone might be able to cast a little light on the following problem regarding hard links to files. ... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Smiling Dragon
6 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

changing a file when the inode modified time of the other file changes

i have a requirement where i needed to change variable values in a properties file(first file) whenever there is change to Release details file(second file). My question is do i have to create a daemon process that always checks the modified time/inode change of the second file and then change the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: saikiran_1984
1 Replies

7. Red Hat

Inode number changes for a file in Redhat Linux

Hi, I have created a file abc.log in Redhat Linux. Inode number for a file get changes every time i update the file using vi editor. Is there any setting that can be made , such that inode number never gets changed? Or if we cannot restrict from inode number getting changed , is... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: raghu.amilineni
9 Replies

8. Solaris

Retreive deleted file name if you having inode number

Some one please help me to find deleted file name, if I am having inode number in Solaris without using any 3rd party tool. Thanks :) (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: aksijain
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Changing inode value of a hardlink

is it possible to change the inode value/ file path of a hard link? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: fhill2
2 Replies

10. Linux

Inode number changes for a file in Redhat Linux

Hi, I have created a file a.txt in Redhat Linux. Inode number for a file changes every time i update the file using vi editor , gedit etc. Is there any setting that can be made , such that inode number never changes as that is supposed to be the expected behavior? Or if we cannot... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: srirammanohar
13 Replies
ALL-KNOWING-DNS(1p)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				       ALL-KNOWING-DNS(1p)

NAME
all-knowing-dns - Tiny DNS server for IPv6 Reverse DNS SYNOPSIS
all-knowing-dns [--configfile <path>] [--querylog] DESCRIPTION
AllKnowingDNS provides reverse DNS for IPv6 networks which use SLAAC (autoconf), e.g. for a /64 network. The problem with IPv6 reverse DNS and traditional nameservers is that the nameserver requires you to provide a zone file. Assuming you want to provide RDNS for a /64 network, you have 2**64 = 18446744073709551616 different usable IP addresses (a little less if you are using SLAAC). Providing a zone file for that, even in a very terse notation, would consume a huge amount of disk space and could not possibly be held in the memory of the computers we have nowadays. AllKnowingDNS instead generates PTR and AAAA records on the fly. You only configure which network you want to serve and what your entries should look like. OPTIONS
--configfile=path Use path instead of /etc/all-knowing-dns.conf as configuration file. --querylog Enable logging every query to stdout (for debugging). CONFIGURATION FILE (/etc/all-knowing-dns.conf) The configuration file is wonderfully simple: # Configuration file for AllKnowingDNS v1.3 listen 79.140.39.197 listen 2001:4d88:100e:1::3 # RaumZeitLabor network 2001:4d88:100e:ccc0::/64 resolves to ipv6-%DIGITS%.nutzer.raumzeitlabor.de with upstream 2001:4d88:100e:1::2 # Chaostreff network 2001:4d88:100e:cd1::/64 resolves to ipv6-%DIGITS%.treff.noname-ev.de This example contains all configuration directives. Let's go over them one by one: listen address Listens on the given address (IPv4 and IPv6 is supported) on port 53. network network Specifies that queries for PTR records within the given network should be answered (any query for an unconfigured network will be answered with NXDOMAIN). You need to specify at least the resolves to directive afterwards. resolves to address Specifies the address to which PTR records should resolve. The address needs to contain %DIGITS% exactly once. When answering AAAA queries, %DIGITS% will be parsed and converted back to an IPv6 address. Example: network 2001:4d88:100e:ccc0::/64 resolves to ipv6-%DIGITS%.nutzer.raumzeitlabor.de Example query: The PTR query 2001:4d88:100e:ccc0:216:eaff:fecb:826 will resolve to ipv6-0216eafffecb0826.nutzer.raumzeitlabor.de with upstream address Before answering a PTR query for this network, AllKnowingDNS will ask the DNS server at address first, appending .upstream to the query. Example: network 2001:4d88:100e:ccc0::/64 resolves to ipv6-%DIGITS%.nutzer.raumzeitlabor.de with upstream 2001:4d88:100e:1::2 Example query: The PTR query 2001:4d88:100e:ccc0:219:dbff:fe43:2ec5 will make AllKnowingDNS ask for 5.c.e.2.3.4.e.f.f.f.b.d.9.1.2.0.0.c.c.c.e.0.0.1. 8.8.d.4.1.0.0.2.ip6.arpa.upstream. at 2001:4d88:100e:1::2 and relay the answer, if any. DELEGATING ZONES
This section shows you how to delegate a zone in BIND9 or any DNS server with a compatible zone file syntax. To use AllKnowingDNS, you need to delegate the appropriate .ip6.arpa zone for your network and one regular domain. REVERSE DELEGATION (.ip6.arpa) $ORIGIN . $TTL 604800 ; 1 week e.0.0.1.8.8.d.4.1.0.0.2.ip6.arpa IN SOA infra.in.zekjur.net. hostmaster.zekjur.net. ( 20 ; serial 604800 ; refresh (1 week) 86400 ; retry (1 day) 2419200 ; expire (4 weeks) 604800 ; minimum (1 week) ) NS libri.sur5r.net. NS infra.in.zekjur.net. ; net for RaumZeitLabor 0.c.c.c.e.0.0.1.8.8.d.4.1.0.0.2.ip6.arpa. IN NS ipv6-rdns.zekjur.net. FORWARD DELEGATION (.nutzer.raumzeitlabor.de) $TTL 6h raumzeitlabor.de IN SOA ns1.jpru.de. hostmaster.jpru.de. ( 2012030701 3h 30m 7d 1d ) IN NS ns1.jpru.de. IN NS ns2.jpru.de. IN A 195.49.138.121 IN MX 10 rzl.uugrn.org. IN MX 20 up.uugrn.org. IN MX 50 mail.uugrn.org. IN MX 100 rzl.uugrn.org. nutzer.raumzeitlabor.de. IN NS ipv6-rdns.zekjur.net. VERSION
Version 1.3 AUTHOR
Michael Stapelberg, "<michael at stapelberg.de>" LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2012 Michael Stapelberg. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the BSD license. perl v5.14.2 2012-03-28 ALL-KNOWING-DNS(1p)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:48 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy