Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Cyrillic Hostnames?
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Cyrillic Hostnames? Post 302951034 by Corona688 on Friday 31st of July 2015 02:27:21 PM
Old 07-31-2015
hostnames may be related to dns but aren't really dns. I wouldn't expect that limit to change.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

newbie question about hostnames

When I log into bash it will say my username @localhost I wondering how do I change localhost to another such as draco.I've the using the hostname command as root but it changes back to localhost after I reboot.I was wondering how would I hide my ISP hostname in linux.Because when I log into an IRC... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: angelfly
1 Replies

2. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers

Cyrillic under X

RedHat 7.2, Gnome 1.4. tried "everything" but still can't figure out how to make cyrillic characters work normally. actually I don't care about anything other than Opera (6.01). I need it to display cyrillic normally. If anyone knows the solution plz help. TIA!!! (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: D-Lexy
2 Replies

3. IP Networking

DHCP and Hostnames

I have a linksys DSL router. I run a mixed environment of Windows, Linux and Solaris. The routers dhcp tables show the windows machines hostnames and associated IP's ok but the unix bases mahines don't have associated hostnames in the DHCP tables. I can ping by IP but not my the machines... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: mr16ga
5 Replies

4. AIX

Unable to print Cyrillic fonts

Hi All I confifured HP 4250 printer on AIX server..I am unable to print cyrillic fonts prints. Please assist.. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: kandatihari
0 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Cyrillic in Nautilus

Well. Again. I have followed all the instructions in the Russian localization HOWTO and I am able to type in Russian and read it correctly in most programs such as Firefox, email and so on. However in the Nautilus file viewer, I get only ________ marks. I've seen some packages for Russian... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Levenson
7 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Korn shell to insert cyrillic characters into the databse

i have written a shell script that reads a csv file and inserts tokenized strings into the database. the problem comes when the csv file has cyrillic characters. how do i set the parameters in my shell script(korn shell) so that any characters can be inserted into the database. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: vkca
3 Replies

7. Programming

Getting All VM Hostnames Using Pysphere

I need to obtain a list of all the hostname of all the VM's that reside on two ESXI servers using pysphere. I have attempted using the basic methods but an unable to get a hostname in my testing using: from pysphere import VIServer server = VIServer() ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: metallica1973
0 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Ip address for multiple hostnames

i have a file which has 100 servers,i want a script which can output me ip address and hostname for that server. Thanks in advance!! input file abc.com output file should be abc.com 192.168.1..1 (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Moon1234
1 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Check for valid hostnames

Hello, I am trying to develop a script to check for valid hostnames. Below are the prerequisites for a valid hostname which I got from wiki : Hostnames are composed of series of labels concatenated with dots, as are all domain names. For example, "en.wikipedia.org" is a hostname. Each label... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: rahul2662
8 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Grouping hostnames for pdsh

Hi All, I have a list of hostnames in a text file and I would like to craft a bash script that would group them for use with pdsh. For example... I would like to group the following from a file: hostname1000 hostname1001 hostname1002 hostname1003 hostname1004 hostname2000... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: joeg1484
4 Replies
dns-sd(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						 dns-sd(1)

NAME
dns-sd -- Multicast DNS (mDNS) & DNS Service Discovery (DNS-SD) Test Tool SYNOPSIS
dns-sd -R name type domain port [key=value ...] dns-sd -B type domain dns-sd -L name type domain DESCRIPTION
The dns-sd command is a network diagnostic tool, much like ping(8) or traceroute(8). However, unlike those tools, most of its functionality is not implemented in the dns-sd executable itself, but in library code that is available to any application. The library API that dns-sd uses is documented in /usr/include/dns_sd.h. The dns-sd command is primarily intended for interactive use. Because its command-line arguments and output format are subject to change, invoking it from a shell script will generally be fragile. Additionally, the asynchronous nature of DNS Service Discovery does not lend itself easily to script-oriented programming. For example, calls like "browse" never complete; the action of performing a "browse" sets in motion machinery to notify the client whenever instances of that service type appear or disappear from the network. These notifications con- tinue to be delivered indefinitely, for minutes, hours, or even days, as services come and go, until the client explicitly terminates the call. This style of asynchronous interaction works best with applications that are either multi-threaded, or use a main event-handling loop to receive keystrokes, network data, and other asynchronous event notifications as they happen. If you wish to perform DNS Service Discovery operations from a scripting language, then the best way to do this is not to execute the dns-sd command and then attempt to decipher the textual output, but instead to directly call the DNS-SD APIs using a binding for your chosen lan- guage. For example, if you are programming in Ruby, then you can directly call DNS-SD APIs using the dnssd package documented at <http://rubyforge.org/projects/dnssd/>. Similar bindings for other languages are also in development. dns-sd -R name type domain port [key=value ...] register (advertise) a service in the specified domain with the given name and type as listening (on the current machine) on port. name can be arbitrary unicode text, containing any legal unicode characters (including dots, spaces, slashes, colons, etc. without restriction), up to 63 UTF-8 bytes long. type must be of the form "_app-proto._tcp" or "_app-proto._udp", where "app-proto" is an appli- cation protocol name registered at http://www.dns-sd.org/ServiceTypes.html. domain is the domain in which to register the service. In current implementations, only the local multicast domain "local" is supported. In the future, registering will be supported in any arbitrary domain that has a working DNS Update server [RFC 2136]. The domain "." is a synonym for "pick a sensible default" which today means "local". port is a number from 0 to 65535, and is the TCP or UDP port number upon which the service is listening. Additional attributes of the service may optionally be described by key/value pairs, which are stored in the advertised service's DNS TXT record. Allowable keys and values are listed with the service registration at http://www.dns-sd.org/ServiceTypes.html. dns-sd -B type domain browse for instances of service type in domain. For valid types see http://www.dns-sd.org/ServiceTypes.html as described above. Omitting the domain or using "." means "pick a sensible default." dns-sd -L name type domain look up and display the information necessary to contact and use the named service: the hostname of the machine where that service is available, the port number on which the service is listening, and (if present) TXT record attributes describing properties of the service. Note that in a typical application, browsing happens rarely, while lookup (or "resolving") happens every time the service is used. For example, a user browses the network to pick a default printer fairly rarely, but once a default printer has been picked, that named ser- vice is resolved to its current IP address and port number every time the user presses Cmd-P to print. EXAMPLES
To advertise the existence of LPR printing service on port 515 on this machine, such that it will be discovered by the Mac OS X printing software and other DNS-SD compatible printing clients, use: dns-sd -R "My Test" _printer._tcp. . 515 pdl=application/postscript For this registration to be useful, you need to actually have LPR service available on port 515. Advertising a service that does not exist is not very useful, and will be confusing and annoying to other people on the network. Similarly, to advertise a web page being served by an HTTP server on port 80 on this machine, such that it will show up in the Bonjour list in Safari and other DNS-SD compatible Web clients, use: dns-sd -R "My Test" _http._tcp . 80 path=/path-to-page.html To find the advertised web pages on the local network (the same list that Safari shows), use: dns-sd -B _http._tcp While that command is running, in another window, try the dns-sd -R example given above to advertise a web page, and you should see the "Add" event reported to the dns-sd -B window. Now press Ctrl-C in the dns-sd -R window and you should see the "Remove" event reported to the dns-sd -B window. FILES
/usr/bin/dns-sd SEE ALSO
mdnsd(8) HISTORY
The dns-sd command first appeared in NetBSD 6.0, having originated in Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger). NetBSD June 2, 2019 NetBSD
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:12 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy