About the alias, just add loghost to the localhost line: ---------- Post updated at 22:50 ---------- Previous update was at 22:36 ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by solaris_user
Most of space goes to home directory by default so you must reinstall Solaris because there is no way to allocate more space to the / device
There is certainly a way, but it's not at all simple. gparted isn't required.
Quote:
If you gonna to reinstall Solaris use ZFS because UFS is no longer supported by the Oracle Corporation.
I agree about the ZFS suggestion. ZFS would have avoided the suboptimal partition sizing. However, your UFS support comment is misleading. UFS will remain supported with Solaris 10 for the root file system and others. Solaris 11 Express indeed requires root ZFS but hopefully still supports UFS for data file systems.
Quote:
For the sendmail, you must configure sendmail server or you can disable it using SMF.
or just keep sendmail enabled. The default configuration allows local mail delivery which can still be useful.
hello everybody,
here is my problem:
________________________________________
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
int i=10;
printf("value is %i",i);
return 0;
}
_________________________________________
when i compile and execute, nothing appears on screen!!
but if i replace the printf... (2 Replies)
I have a requirement to close all the file descriptors from 3 to 1024 for a particular application.
Right now, this is how I do it ..
for ( int i = 3 ; i <= 1024; ++i )
close(i);
The change I am looking at is, I want to do away with the number 1024 and replace it with a constant which... (4 Replies)
I'm not sure how to best explain what I'd like to do, so let me give an example. I used to work in a department that deals with internet security. This department had an "internal" website (only people in the building can get on it) and an "external" website (anyone in the world can get on it --... (1 Reply)
Dear all,
I have the files: xaa xab xac
and I try to paste them using $paste -d, xaa xab xac
I see:
output
3e-130
,6e-78
,5e-74
6e-124
,0,007
,0,026
2e-119
When I type: $ paste -d, xaa xab xac |less
I see:
output
3e-130^M,6e-78^M,5e-74
6e-124^M,0,007^M,0,026 (2 Replies)
I wonder string constant exists permanently or temporary.
For example,
printf("hello, world");
the function printf access to it is through a pointer. Does it mean storage is allocated for the string constant to exist permanently in memory? :confused: (4 Replies)
Dears,
Need you help with the below file manipulation. I want to split the file into 8 smaller files but without cutting/disturbing the entries (meaning every small file should start with a entry and end with an empty line). It will be helpful if you can provide a one liner command for this... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: Kamesh G
12 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENSOLARIS
domainname
domainname(1M) System Administration Commands domainname(1M)NAME
domainname - set or display name of the current domain
SYNOPSIS
domainname [name-of-domain]
DESCRIPTION
Without an argument, domainname displays the name of the current domain name used in RPC exchanges, usually referred to as the NIS or NIS+
domain name. This name typically encompasses a group of hosts or passwd entries under the same administration. The domainname command is
used by various components of Solaris to resolve names for entries such as are found in passwd, hosts and aliases. By default, naming ser-
vices such as NIS and NIS+ use domainname to resolve names.
With appropriate privileges (root or an equivalent role [see rbac(5)]), you can set the name of the domain by specifying the name as an
argument to the domainname command.
The domain name for various naming services can also be set by other means. For example, ypinit can be used to specify a different domain
for all NIS calls. The domain name of the machine is usually set during boot time through the domainname command by the svc:/system/iden-
tity:domain service. If the new domain name is not saved in the /etc/defaultdomain file, the machine reverts to the old domain after it
reboots.
The sendmail(1M) daemon, as shipped with Solaris, and the sendmail implementation provided by sendmail.org (formerly referred to as "Berke-
ley 8.x sendmail") both attempt to determine a local host's fully qualified host name at startup and both pursue follow-up actions if the
initial search fails. It is in these follow-up actions that the two implementations differ.
Both implementations use a standard Solaris or Unix system call to determine its fully qualified host name at startup, following the name
service priorities specified in nsswitch.conf(4). To this point, the Solaris and sendmail.org versions behave identically.
If the request for a fully qualified host name fails, the sendmail.org sendmail sleeps for 60 seconds, tries again, and, upon continuing
failure, resorts to a short name. The Solaris version of sendmail makes the same initial request, but then, following initial failure,
calls domainname. If successful, the sleep is avoided.
On a Solaris machine, if you run the sendmail.org version of sendmail, you get the startup behavior (omitting the domainname call)
described above. If you run the Solaris sendmail, the domainname call is made if needed.
If the Solaris sendmail cannot determine the fully qualified host name, use check-hostname(1M) as a troubleshooting aid. This script can
offer guidance as to appropriate corrective action.
FILES
/etc/defaultdomain
/etc/nsswitch.conf
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWcsu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO NIS+(1), nischown(1), nispasswd(1), svcs(1), check-hostname(1M), hostconfig(1M), named(1M), nisaddcred(1M), sendmail(1M), svcadm(1M),
ypinit(1M), sys-unconfig(1M), aliases(4), defaultdomain(4), hosts(4), nsswitch.conf(4), passwd(4), attributes(5), rbac(5), smf(5)NOTES
The domainname service is managed by the service management facility, smf(5), under the service identifier:
svc:/system/identity:domain
Administrative actions on this service, such as enabling, disabling, or requesting restart, can be performed using svcadm(1M). The ser-
vice's status can be queried using the svcs(1) command.
SunOS 5.11 8 Mar 2006 domainname(1M)