Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Solaris I am too young not to be able to resolve myself...nslookup problem (no DNS available) Post 89775 by reborg on Tuesday 15th of November 2005 06:17:41 PM
Old 11-15-2005
No, the closest you can get tho that is:

getent hosts some_hostname
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

DNS Problem

hello !!! I have some problem for Sun Solaris DNS i already configured named.boot , named.rev, named.hosts but when i start the DNS service there is an error " error cannot find named.conf " in my manual there is no named.conf configuration it said that if you configure named.boot... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: giancarlodjabon
3 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

nslookup problem

I am having trouble configuring BIND 8.3 on Solaris 9. When I run nslookup, I get this error/message: test# nslookup *** Can't find server name for address 192.168.1.31: Non-existent host/domain *** Default servers are not available I double checked everything and I can't figure this out. I... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: xnightcrawl
8 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

DNS client nslookup

Hello, I just got done setting up a DNS server and a client. However, when I do an nslookup with just the hostname, I got this output: Microsoft Windows 2000 (C) Copyright 1985-2000 Microsoft Corp. C:\Documents and Settings\dev9>nslookup dev9 Server: webdev.testsurgemail.com Address:... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: xnightcrawl
3 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

please resolve the below problem

#!/bin/sh # 'clear' for i in $(seq -w 15 37) do echo $i echo The content in Z Z=`wget --dns-timeout=0.001 http://napdweb${i}.eao.abn-iad.ea.com:8000/webcore/test/test.jsp` echo $Z A="Connection timed out." echo The content in A echo $A expr "$A" : '..\(...\)' echo $A done ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: veerumahanthi41
1 Replies

5. Linux

resolve one IP on DNS server

Hi! I have a dns server (bind) with 2 zones forward and reverse and i need to resolve one ip completely different. I have add to /etc/hosts and i can ping but i can't do nslookup. I've tried to add the dns server responsible to resolve that ip on /etc/resolv.conf without success. So how can i... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: BufferExploder
2 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Scripting nslookup to resolve multiple hostnames

Hi Friends, I have a list of servers with their production names in a file. I want to know the best way eiter a command or a script that can do the following :- Append "-bkp" to each hostnames at the end And run nslookup and make sure I have valid backup IP add assigned to it. Any... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: new2prog
1 Replies

7. Red Hat

Mail Problem. Maybe, it is a DNS Problem!

Hi, i've a redhat linux 9 upadated by redhat from 7 version to 9 version. A couple of days ago i was a problem with my mail, in other words i'm not able to get any email nor to send any email. I've a proxy configuration and i tried to set iptables in order to verify the port. The 110,255 and 995... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: pintalgi
1 Replies

8. HP-UX

nslookup/ping resolve problem 11i v3

I am having a problem with a new server build that has got me completely baffled. This server has a private back end network so the way it is supposed to work is that the server thinks its ip address is 10.131.0.48 but the rest of the world knows it as 199.68.100.100 per DNS. It has to be this way... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: keelba
2 Replies

9. Red Hat

Could not resolve ip through DNS

Dear all , Very recently our DNS server ip got changed. I have entered the DNS ip in /etc/resolv.conf ...but I could not resolv it for my ip address. Verified that , the IP is added in the DNS also. It is still working with the old DNS ip. Please let me know what could be... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: jegaraman
11 Replies
GETENT(1)							   User Commands							 GETENT(1)

NAME
getent - get entries from Name Service Switch libraries SYNOPSIS
getent [option]... database key... DESCRIPTION
The getent command displays entries from databases supported by the Name Service Switch libraries, which are configured in /etc/nss- witch.conf. If one or more key arguments are provided, then only the entries that match the supplied keys will be displayed. Otherwise, if no key is provided, all entries will be displayed (unless the database does not support enumeration). The database may be any of those supported by the GNU C Library, listed below: ahosts When no key is provided, use sethostent(3), gethostent(3), and endhostent(3) to enumerate the hosts database. This is identi- cal to using hosts. When one or more key arguments are provided, pass each key in succession to getaddrinfo(3) with the address family AF_UNSPEC, enumerating each socket address structure returned. ahostsv4 Same as ahosts, but use the address family AF_INET. ahostsv6 Same as ahosts, but use the address family AF_INET6. The call to getaddrinfo(3) in this case includes the AI_V4MAPPED flag. aliases When no key is provided, use setaliasent(3), getaliasent(3), and endaliasent(3) to enumerate the aliases database. When one or more key arguments are provided, pass each key in succession to getaliasbyname(3) and display the result. ethers When one or more key arguments are provided, pass each key in succession to ether_aton(3) and ether_hostton(3) until a result is obtained, and display the result. Enumeration is not supported on ethers, so a key must be provided. group When no key is provided, use setgrent(3), getgrent(3), and endgrent(3) to enumerate the group database. When one or more key arguments are provided, pass each numeric key to getgrgid(3) and each nonnumeric key to getgrnam(3) and display the result. gshadow When no key is provided, use setsgent(3), getsgent(3), and endsgent(3) to enumerate the gshadow database. When one or more key arguments are provided, pass each key in succession to getsgnam(3) and display the result. hosts When no key is provided, use sethostent(3), gethostent(3), and endhostent(3) to enumerate the hosts database. When one or more key arguments are provided, pass each key to gethostbyaddr(3) or gethostbyname2(3), depending on whether a call to inet_pton(3) indicates that the key is an IPv6 or IPv4 address or not, and display the result. initgroups When one or more key arguments are provided, pass each key in succession to getgrouplist(3) and display the result. Enumera- tion is not supported on initgroups, so a key must be provided. netgroup When one key is provided, pass the key to setnetgrent(3) and, using getnetgrent(3) display the resulting string triple (host- name, username, domainname). Alternatively, three keys may be provided, which are interpreted as the hostname, username and domainname to match to a netgroup name via innetgr(3). Enumeration is not supported on netgroup, so either one or three keys must be provided. networks When no key is provided, use setnetent(3), getnetent(3), and endnetent(3) to enumerate the networks database. When one or more key arguments are provided, pass each numeric key to getnetbyaddr(3) and each nonnumeric key to getnetbyname(3) and dis- play the result. passwd When no key is provided, use setpwent(3), getpwent(3), and endpwent(3) to enumerate the passwd database. When one or more key arguments are provided, pass each numeric key to getpwuid(3) and each nonnumeric key to getpwnam(3) and display the result. protocols When no key is provided, use setprotoent(3), getprotoent(3), and endprotoent(3) to enumerate the protocols database. When one or more key arguments are provided, pass each numeric key to getprotobynumber(3) and each nonnumeric key to getprotobyname(3) and display the result. rpc When no key is provided, use setrpcent(3), getrpcent(3), and endrpcent(3) to enumerate the rpc database. When one or more key arguments are provided, pass each numeric key to getrpcbynumber(3) and each nonnumeric key to getrpcbyname(3) and display the result. services When no key is provided, use setservent(3), getservent(3), and endservent(3) to enumerate the services database. When one or more key arguments are provided, pass each numeric key to getservbynumber(3) and each nonnumeric key to getservbyname(3) and display the result. shadow When no key is provided, use setspent(3), getspent(3), and endspent(3) to enumerate the shadow database. When one or more key arguments are provided, pass each key in succession to getspnam(3) and display the result. OPTIONS
-s service, --service service Override all databases with the specified service. (Since glibc 2.2.5.) -s database:service, --service database:service Override only specified databases with the specified service. The option may be used multiple times, but only the last service for each database will be used. (Since glibc 2.4.) -i, --no-idn Disables IDN encoding in lookups for ahosts/getaddrinfo(3) (Since glibc-2.13.) -?, --help Print a usage summary and exit. --usage Print a short usage summary and exit. -V, --version Print the version number, license, and disclaimer of warranty for getent. EXIT STATUS
One of the following exit values can be returned by getent: 0 Command completed successfully. 1 Missing arguments, or database unknown. 2 One or more supplied key could not be found in the database. 3 Enumeration not supported on this database. SEE ALSO
nsswitch.conf(5) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 4.15 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be found at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. Linux 2015-04-19 GETENT(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:23 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy