Allegedly, on or about 18 August 2018, Ed Greshko sent: > my DHCP server doesn't supply Domain Name Not unusual. All sorts of different things may happen. Clients can use their own (ignoring the fact that it mightn't work with anything else in the network). They may or may not inform the DHCP server of the hostname that they want to use. DHCP servers can honour a client's requested hostname, or ignore it. They can send their own defined hostname to the client (which might ignore it). They can not bother to send any hostname to the client. A client can determine their hostname by doing a reverse DNS lookup on the IP that they get assigned. The DNS server may be supplying names coded into it (e.g. whatever's at 192.168.1.2 will always be two.lan), or the DHCP server may have created a DNS record providing the name (giving a preset name to a particular MAC, whatever numerical IP address it gets assigned today). You can end up with clients *apparently* having two hostnames: The one a user has given the machine, which will only work on the machine, and nothing external to it knows what it is. And DHCP/DNS assigned ones, which everything else on the LAN knows that machine as, but the machine doesn't appear to know about it, itself. -- [tim@localhost ~]$ uname -rsvp Linux 4.16.11-100.fc26.x86_64 #1 SMP Tue May 22 20:02:12 UTC 2018 x86_64 Boilerplate: All mail to my mailbox is automatically deleted. There is no point trying to privately email me, I only get to see the messages posted to the mailing list. _______________________________________________ users mailing list -- users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe send an email to users-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Fedora Code of Conduct: https://getfedora.org/code-of-conduct.html List Guidelines: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines List Archives: https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/message/T7U6XPWZT6REPZMISJ52TWQJYFBRMOHX/