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Full Discussion: router and internat acess
Special Forums IP Networking router and internat acess Post 54854 by kasia on Thursday 26th of August 2004 07:16:34 AM
Old 08-26-2004
Hello,

The router is Berklin.
Tux, apache httpd.conf has nothing to do with it since I am unable to even connect to FTP using external IP and so.
I also tried this trick with /etc/hosts but without luck, can you give me a syntax? I puted:

192.168.2.6 example.com

Is this is correct? if so, why do I still get the:
server# host example.com
example.com has address x.x.x.x ?


Thanks
 

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defaultrouter(4)						   File Formats 						  defaultrouter(4)

NAME
defaultrouter - configuration file for default router(s) SYNOPSIS
/etc/defaultrouter DESCRIPTION
The /etc/defaultrouter file specifies a IPv4 host's default router(s). The format of the file is as follows: IP_address ... The /etc/defaultrouter file can contain the IP addresses or hostnames of one or more default routers, with each entry on its own line. If you use hostnames, each hostname must also be listed in the local /etc/hosts file, because no name services are running at the time that defaultrouter is read. Lines beginning with the ``#'' character are treated as comments. The default routes listed in this file replace those added by the kernel during diskless booting. An empty /etc/defaultrouter file will cause the default route added by the kernel to be deleted. Use of a default route, whether received from a DHCP server or from /etc/defaultrouter, prevents a machine from acting as an IPv4 router. You can use routeadm(1M) to override this behavior. FILES
/etc/defaultrouter Configuration file containing the hostnames or IP addresses of one or more default routers. SEE ALSO
in.rdisc(1M), in.routed(1M), routeadm(1M), hosts(4) SunOS 5.10 17 Aug 2004 defaultrouter(4)
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