Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: DHCP and DNS
Special Forums IP Networking DHCP and DNS Post 41874 by meyersp on Thursday 16th of October 2003 09:14:43 AM
Old 10-16-2003
DHCP and DNS

I asked a similar type question in the solaris forum but i think this relates closer to networking. I am trying to setup a small NIS environment that is contained within a large company network. The client machines are getting an IP from the companys' Windows DHCP server. The NIS server has a static IP. The domain I setup is "unixnis". The FQDN is unixnis.saco.cu.edu. The clients that are obtaining IP addresses from dhcp have a FQDN as computername.saco.cu.edu. Notice the domain i created and that they should be members of is not in the list. I know im missing some basic networking concept can someone help me out?

Thanks
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. IP Networking

DHCP, DNS and LDAP

I have just started learning Unix on Solaris and have been asked to learn DHCP, DNS and LDAP very quick in order to implement them and maintain. Does anyone know how to do this or a decent book that will include all the above three which tells you how to install and maintain. All i have found so... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ollyparkhouse
2 Replies

2. IP Networking

Solaris DHCP and DNS

I have managed to setup my Solaris box to receive an IP number from a DHCP server. In addition, I can ping and telnet between my dhcp server and my solaris box using the IP number. However, I can't resolve addresses by name from my solaris box. In my nsswitch.conf file I have: hosts: dns ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: marist89
4 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

DHCP update DNS ?

Hi all, I'm in the dark about this. I have setup a dhcp server and a DNS server. I'm confuss as to how to have DNS auto update any new clinet that the dhcp has given an ip address for. Can this be done. I think that I'm missing something in the configuration of DHCP. I was told that when a DHCPD... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: larry
3 Replies

4. Solaris

DHCP DNS Config

I'm running Solaris 9 and I need my box to request it's DNS servers off a DHCP server - can I do this? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Jdogg
1 Replies

5. IP Networking

configuring dns and dhcp

hello i am running my sipx server in 192.168.2.14 i would like to configure domain name and host name for this ..... can anyone tell me how to configure dns server and dhcp server so that any body both outside and inside the lan could access the sipx server by their host.domain.com name (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sudeepiit
1 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

DNS & DHCP configuration

Hi to all. Sorry for my bad english. For pure self-educational, not professional, purposes, I am studying how to configure a server with several services operating on it. For my experiment I'm using VirtualBox 3.1.4 on a WinXP host with 3 FreeBSD guests; one acts as a DHCP + DNS server; the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: marboxer
0 Replies

7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

dnsmasq for dhcp to setup dns

Is dnsmasq important for dhcp to setup dns? (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: cokedude
3 Replies

8. Red Hat

dhcp not setting dns and changing to garbage

I have 2 problems. Dhcp is not setting dns and after I manually set my dns it changes to garbage. I literally just used command to set dns which is a good copy of resolv.conf: sudo cp /home/bob/Desktop/scripts_9-12-2011/resolv.conf /etc/resolv.confHere is a copy of my resolv.conf. #... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: cokedude
5 Replies

9. Red Hat

DHCP & DNS - Clients get IP but don't register in DNS

I am trying to setup a CentOS 6.2 server that will be doing 3 things DHCP, DNS & Samba for a very small office (2 users). The idea being this will replace a very old Win2k server. The users are all windows based clients so only the server will be Linux based. I've installed CentOS 6.2 with... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: FireBIade
4 Replies

10. IP Networking

DHCP and DNS on a home network

Let's say I have a home network containing a server that acts as the resident gateway and serves dhcp and dns requests. Laptop A is frequently connected and disconnected from the network as it is used as a travel computer. Is there a secure way to make sure that whenever laptop A is connected to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Zygomorph
3 Replies
HOSTNAME(1)						     Linux Programmer's Manual						       HOSTNAME(1)

NAME
hostname - show or set the system's host name domainname - show or set the system's NIS/YP domain name ypdomainname - show or set the system's NIS/YP domain name nisdomainname - show or set the system's NIS/YP domain name dnsdomainname - show the system's DNS domain name SYNOPSIS
hostname [-v] [-a] [--alias] [-d] [--domain] [-f] [--fqdn] [-A] [--all-fqdns] [-i] [--ip-address] [-I] [--all-ip-addresses] [--long] [-s] [--short] [-y] [--yp] [--nis] hostname [-v] [-b] [--boot] [-F filename] [--file filename] [hostname] hostname [-v] [-h] [--help] [-V] [--version] domainname [nisdomain] [-F file] ypdomainname [nisdomain] [-F file] nisdomainname [nisdomain] [-F file] dnsdomainname [-v] DESCRIPTION
Hostname is used to display the system's DNS name, and to display or set its hostname or NIS domain name. GET NAME When called without any arguments, the program displays the current names: hostname will print the name of the system as returned by the gethostname(2) function. domainname will print the NIS domainname of the system. domainname uses the gethostname(2) function, while ypdomainname and nisdomainname use the yp_get_default_domain(3). dnsdomainname will print the domain part of the FQDN (Fully Qualified Domain Name). The complete FQDN of the system is returned with host- name --fqdn (but see the warnings in section THE FQDN below). SET NAME When called with one argument or with the --file option, the commands set the host name or the NIS/YP domain name. hostname uses the sethostname(2) function, while all of the three domainname, ypdomainname and nisdomainname use setdomainname(2). Note, that this is effec- tive only until the next reboot. Edit /etc/hostname for permanent change. Note, that only the super-user can change the names. It is not possible to set the FQDN or the DNS domain name with the dnsdomainname command (see THE FQDN below). The host name is usually set once at system startup in /etc/init.d/hostname.sh (normally by reading the contents of a file which contains the host name, e.g. /etc/hostname). THE FQDN You can't change the FQDN (as returned by hostname --fqdn) or the DNS domain name (as returned by dnsdomainname) with this command. The FQDN of the system is the name that the resolver(3) returns for the host name. Technically: The FQDN is the name getaddrinfo(3) returns for the host name returned by gethostname(2). The DNS domain name is the part after the first dot. Therefore it depends on the configuration (usually in /etc/host.conf) how you can change it. Usually (if the hosts file is parsed before DNS or NIS) you can change it in /etc/hosts. If a machine has multiple network interfaces/addresses or is used in a mobile environment, then it may either have multiple FQDNs/domain names or none at all. Therefore avoid using hostname --fqdn, hostname --domain and dnsdomainname. hostname --ip-address is subject to the same limitations so it should be avoided as well. OPTIONS
-a, --alias Display the alias name of the host (if used). This option is deprecated and should not be used anymore. -b, --boot Always set a hostname; this allows the file specified by -F to be non-existant or empty, in which case the default hostname local- host will be used if none is yet set. -d, --domain Display the name of the DNS domain. Don't use the command domainname to get the DNS domain name because it will show the NIS domain name and not the DNS domain name. Use dnsdomainname instead. Ssee the warnings in section THE FQDN above, and avoid using this option. -F, --file filename Read the host name from the specified file. Comments (lines starting with a `#') are ignored. -f, --fqdn, --long Display the FQDN (Fully Qualified Domain Name). A FQDN consists of a short host name and the DNS domain name. Unless you are using bind or NIS for host lookups you can change the FQDN and the DNS domain name (which is part of the FQDN) in the /etc/hosts file. See the warnings in section THE FQDN above, and avoid using this option; use hostname --all-fqdns instead. -A, --all-fqdns Displays all FQDNs of the machine. This option enumerates all configured network addresses on all configured network interfaces, and translates them to DNS domain names. Addresses that cannot be translated (i.e. because they do not have an appropriate reverse DNS entry) are skipped. Note that different addresses may resolve to the same name, therefore the output may contain duplicate entries. Do not make any assumptions about the order of the output. -h, --help Print a usage message and exit. -i, --ip-address Display the network address(es) of the host name. Note that this works only if the host name can be resolved. Avoid using this option; use hostname --all-ip-addresses instead. -I, --all-ip-addresses Display all network addresses of the host. This option enumerates all configured addresses on all network interfaces. The loopback interface and IPv6 link-local addresses are omitted. Contrary to option -i, this option does not depend on name resolution. Do not make any assumptions about the order of the output. -s, --short Display the short host name. This is the host name cut at the first dot. -V, --version Print version information on standard output and exit successfully. -v, --verbose Be verbose and tell what's going on. -y, --yp, --nis Display the NIS domain name. If a parameter is given (or --file name ) then root can also set a new NIS domain. NOTES
The address families hostname tries when looking up the FQDN, aliases and network addresses of the host are determined by the configuration of your resolver. For instance, on GNU Libc systems, the resolver can be instructed to try IPv6 lookups first by using the inet6 option in /etc/resolv.conf. FILES
/etc/hosts /etc/hostname This file should only contain the hostname and not the full FQDN. AUTHORS
Peter Tobias, <tobias@et-inf.fho-emden.de> Bernd Eckenfels, <net-tools@lina.inka.de> (NIS and manpage). Michael Meskes, <meskes@debian.org> net-tools 2009-09-16 HOSTNAME(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:29 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy