12-02-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by
jegaraman
Is it wise to collect the inputs from the local zone rather than taking from the global zone.
That depends on what you want to collect and how but it is generally wiser to take them from the global one
Quote:
And also Can I tune from Global zone , so that it will reflect in local zone.
That depends on what you want to tune. Some tuning cannot be done but on the global one.
This User Gave Thanks to jlliagre For This Post:
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LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
nbp_name
NBP_NAME(3) Library Functions Manual NBP_NAME(3)
NAME
nbp_name - NBP name parsing
SYNOPSIS
nbp_name( name, obj, type, zone )
char *name, **obj, **type, **zone;
DESCRIPTION
nbp_name() parses user supplied names into their component object, type, and zone. obj, type, and zone should be passed by reference, and
should point to the caller's default values. nbp_name() will change the pointers to the parsed-out values. name is of the form
object:type@zone, where each of object, :type, and @zone replace obj, type, and zone, respectively. type must be proceeded by `:', and
zone must be preceded by `@'.
EXAMPLE
The argument of afpd(8)'s -n option is parsed with nbp_name(). The default value of obj is the first component of the machine's hostname
(as returned by gethostbyname(3)). The default value of type is ``AFPServer'', and of zone is ``*'', the default zone. To cause afpd to
register itself in some zone other than the default, one would invoke it as
afpd -n @some-other-zone
obj and type would retain their default values.
BUGS
obj, type, and zone return pointers into static area which may be over-written on each call.
netatalk 1.3 12 Jan 1994 NBP_NAME(3)