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Operating Systems Solaris I am too young not to be able to resolve myself...nslookup problem (no DNS available) Post 89763 by mr_manny on Tuesday 15th of November 2005 04:38:16 PM
Old 11-15-2005
I am too young not to be able to resolve myself...nslookup problem (no DNS available)

I don't have DNS, and would like to resolve EVERYTHING through local /etc/hosts file.

My first sunbox has the following configuration:

# hostname
mybox.home.com


My host file is as follows:
# cat /etc/hosts
#
# Internet host table
#
127.0.0.1 localhost
192.25.x.x mybox.home.com mybox loghost


ifconfig is correct, and ping works:
# ping mybox.home.com
mybox.home.com is alive


I don't have a resolve file:
# ls /etc/res*
/etc/res*: No such file or directory


my nsswitch.conf looks like the following (no DNS):
# cat /etc/nsswitch.conf
#
# /etc/nsswitch.files:
#
# An example file that could be copied over to /etc/nsswitch.conf; it
# does not use any naming service.
#
# "hosts:" and "services:" in this file are used only if the
# /etc/netconfig file has a "-" for nametoaddr_libs of "inet" transports.

passwd: files
group: files
hosts: files
ipnodes: files
networks: files
protocols: files
rpc: files
ethers: files
netmasks: files
bootparams: files
publickey: files
# At present there isn't a 'files' backend for netgroup; the system will
# figure it out pretty quickly, and won't use netgroups at all.
netgroup: files
automount: files
aliases: files
services: files
printers: user files
auth_attr: files
prof_attr: files
project: files



yet I can't even resolve the box itself?


# nslookup mybox.home.com
;; connection timed out; no servers could be reached

# host 192.25.x.x
;; connection timed out; no servers could be reached

# nslookup 192.25.x.x
;; connection timed out; no servers could be reached

what am I missing?
manny
 

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Net::Nslookup(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					Net::Nslookup(3pm)

NAME
Net::Nslookup - Provide nslookup(1)-like capabilities SYNOPSIS
use Net::Nslookup; my @addrs = nslookup $host; my @mx = nslookup(type => "MX", domain => "perl.org"); DESCRIPTION
"Net::Nslookup" provides the capabilities of the standard UNIX command line tool nslookup(1). "Net::DNS" is a wonderful and full featured module, but quite often, all you need is `nslookup $host`. This module provides that functionality. "Net::Nslookup" exports a single function, called "nslookup". "nslookup" can be used to retrieve A, PTR, CNAME, MX, NS, SOA, and TXT records. my $a = nslookup(host => "use.perl.org", type => "A"); my @mx = nslookup(domain => "perl.org", type => "MX"); my @ns = nslookup(domain => "perl.org", type => "NS"); my $name = nslookup(host => "206.33.105.41", type => "PTR"); "nslookup" takes a hash of options, one of which should be term, and performs a DNS lookup on that term. The type of lookup is determined by the type argument. If server is specified (it should be an IP address, or a reference to an array of IP addresses), that server(s) will be used for lookups. If only a single argument is passed in, the type defaults to A, that is, a normal A record lookup. If "nslookup" is called in a list context, and there is more than one address, an array is returned. If "nslookup" is called in a scalar context, and there is more than one address, "nslookup" returns the first address. If there is only one address returned, then, naturally, it will be the only one returned, regardless of the calling context. domain and host are synonyms for term, and can be used to make client code more readable. For example, use domain when getting NS records, and use host for A records; both do the same thing. server should be a single IP address or a reference to an array of IP addresses: my @a = nslookup(host => 'example.com', server => '4.2.2.1'); my @a = nslookup(host => 'example.com', server => [ '4.2.2.1', '128.103.1.1' ]) By default, when doing CNAME, MX, and NS lookups, "nslookup" returns names, not addresses. This is a change from versions prior to 2.0, which always tried to resolve names to addresses. Pass the recurse => 1 flag to "nslookup" to have it follow CNAME, MX, and NS lookups. Note that this usage of "recurse" is not consistent with the official DNS meaning of recurse. # returns soemthing like ("mail.example.com") my @mx = nslookup(domain => 'example.com', type => 'MX'); # returns soemthing like ("127.0.0.1") my @mx = nslookup(domain => 'example.com', type => 'MX', recurse => 1); SOA lookups return the SOA record in the same format as the `host` tool: print nslookup(domain => 'example.com', type => 'SOA'); dns1.icann.org. hostmaster.icann.org. 2011061433 7200 3600 1209600 3600 TIMEOUTS
Lookups timeout after 15 seconds by default, but this can be configured by passing timeout => X to "nslookup". DEBUGGING
Pass debug => 1 to "nslookup" to emit debugging messages to STDERR. AUTHOR
darren chamberlain <darren@cpan.org> perl v5.12.4 2011-08-15 Net::Nslookup(3pm)
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