Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: DNS daemons
Special Forums IP Networking DNS daemons Post 7426 by Deuce on Wednesday 26th of September 2001 09:56:16 AM
Old 09-26-2001
Network DNS daemons

Does anyone know the command to start the DNS Daemon.

I looked in the /etc/init.d/inetsvc file and it tells me what the text should look like. When I go to open the corresponding files they are encoded and I can't read them.

So is there a command that will start the DNS daemon?

If not how do I get around or through the encoding problem?
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Cybersecurity

root owner of daemons?

Hi all, what happens if i have a service running as root? if it is exploited what would happen? can a hacker actually becomes a hacker and screw up my whole box? thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: xNYx
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Daemons

MYSQL-daemon don't started automatically by system-start. And same trouble with httpd too. I have SuSE 8.0. What can I do ? Thanks.... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Pennywize
6 Replies

3. Linux

A doubt on Daemons

Hi there! I'm a bit curious on something about Daemons.... Supose you have two processes say A and B, where B is a daemon. A is totally independent from B. Is there a way for A to find out B's return code? Is there a way for A to find out when B ends? Thanks! (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: marioh
4 Replies

4. Solaris

SUN SOLARIS boot: start daemons

Hi, I have a problem on a Solaris 9 server! After a restart some daemons don't start and I have to start them manually! I thing that everything is ok in the /sbin/rc3 script! And if I run manually the "/etc/init.d/xxx start" the services start without problem. I didn't find anything in... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ctap
1 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Starting daemons at reboot.

I rebooted my server (solaris 5.8) and I had to manually start the cron and mailx daemons. How do I get these to automatically start at reboot? Thanks in advance. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: shorty
2 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

piping and backgroud processes (daemons)

Hello to all, I've a strage problem here: a perl script that parses the output of sar -q 300 0 (one line of performace data each 5 min. infinately) works fine from the CLI. It processes one line output every 5 minutes. If i disconnect it from the terminal (executing it with cron, nohup startporc... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: demwz
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

daemons definition

hi there, can somebody give me a definition for daemons, or example what are they !! and what the use for? i've done some research and all what i found is /etc/... or /usr/bin/... and i haven't quietly got the concept. any ideas !! Thanks. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: new2Linux
5 Replies

8. HP-UX

status of daemons

Hi there all, Hey, is there a way to get the status of all daemons running on a HPUX? in an easy way? Like the same way how to vieuw the status of packages in cmviewcl. Thanks! (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: draco
1 Replies

9. Solaris

Command to list down all daemons in Solaris

Hi All, Is there any command to list all running daemons in Solaris. I should able to see only running daemons. Regards, SKumar (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: nskumar
5 Replies
Net::DNS::DomainName(3) 				User Contributed Perl Documentation				   Net::DNS::DomainName(3)

NAME
Net::DNS::DomainName - DNS domain name wire representation SYNOPSIS
use Net::DNS::DomainName; $object = new Net::DNS::DomainName('example.com'); $name = $object->name; $data = $object->encode; ( $object, $next ) = decode Net::DNS::DomainName( $data, $offset ); DESCRIPTION
The Net::DNS::DomainName module implements the concrete representation of DNS domain names used within DNS packets. Net::DNS::DomainName defines methods for encoding and decoding wire format octet strings as defined in RFC1035. All other behaviour, including the new() constructor, is inherited from Net::DNS::Domain. The Net::DNS::DomainName1035 and Net::DNS::DomainName2535 packages implement disjoint domain name subtypes which provide the name compression and canonicalisation specified by RFC1035 and RFC2535. These are necessary to meet the backward compatibility requirements introduced by RFC3597. METHODS
new $object = new Net::DNS::DomainName('example.com'); Creates a domain name object which identifies the domain specified by the character string argument. canonical $data = $object->canonical; Returns the canonical wire-format representation of the domain name as defined in RFC2535(8.1). decode $object = decode Net::DNS::DomainName( $buffer, $offset, $hash ); ( $object, $next ) = decode Net::DNS::DomainName( $buffer, $offset, $hash ); Creates a domain name object which represents the DNS domain name identified by the wire-format data at the indicated offset within the data buffer. The argument list consists of a reference to a scalar containing the wire-format data and specified offset. The optional reference to a hash table provides improved efficiency of decoding compressed names by exploiting already cached compression pointers. The returned offset value indicates the start of the next item in the data buffer. encode $data = $object->encode; Returns the wire-format representation of the domain name suitable for inclusion in a DNS packet buffer. Net::DNS::DomainName1035 Net::DNS::DomainName1035 implements a subclass of domain name objects which are to be encoded using the compressed wire format defined in RFC1035. use Net::DNS::DomainName; $object = new Net::DNS::DomainName1035('compressible.example.com'); $data = $object->encode( $offset, $hash ); ( $object, $next ) = decode Net::DNS::DomainName1035( $data, $offset ); Note that RFC3597 implies that the RR types defined in RFC1035 section 3.3 are the only types eligible for compression. encode $data = $object->encode( $offset, $hash ); Returns the wire-format representation of the domain name suitable for inclusion in a DNS packet buffer. The optional arguments are the offset within the packet data where the domain name is to be stored and a reference to a hash table used to index compressed names within the packet. If the hash reference is undefined, encode() returns the lowercase uncompressed canonical representation defined in RFC2535(8.1). Net::DNS::DomainName2535 Net::DNS::DomainName2535 implements a subclass of domain name objects which are to be encoded using uncompressed wire format. Note that RFC3597, and latterly RFC4034, specifies that the lower case canonical encoding defined in RFC2535 is to be used for RR types defined prior to RFC3597. use Net::DNS::DomainName; $object = new Net::DNS::DomainName2535('incompressible.example.com'); $data = $object->encode( $offset, $hash ); ( $object, $next ) = decode Net::DNS::DomainName2535( $data, $offset ); encode $data = $object->encode( $offset, $hash ); Returns the uncompressed wire-format representation of the domain name suitable for inclusion in a DNS packet buffer. If the hash reference is undefined, encode() returns the lowercase canonical form defined in RFC2535(8.1). COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c)2009-2011 Dick Franks. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. SEE ALSO
perl, Net::DNS, Net::DNS::Domain, RFC1035, RFC2535, RFC3597, RFC4034 perl v5.18.2 2014-01-16 Net::DNS::DomainName(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:16 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy