Lamar Owen wrote: > On Friday, April 06, 2012 09:18:27 AM Jonathan Vomacka wrote: >> No matter what I do when I connect to the application it read >> "example.example.org" which is the hostname of the machine rather then >> the hostname I want it to read on a particular IP. Is this possible to >> change? <snip> > A host can only have one name (this is true for basically any IP host, > whether it's a Linux system, a BSD system, a Windows system, or a Cisco > router. Especially on a router with a lot of interfaces (broadband > aggregation routers, for instance, can have thousands of interfaces with > each one having a unique IP) you don't want the name of the IP associated > with the interface to override the hostname. And the hostname does not > have to match what DNS says about the FQDN that belongs to any interface > on the system (I have a few of those, too). > > Now, I can't quote RFC 'chapter and verse' on this, but I have never seen > a system where you could do what you're describing. (that doesn't mean > they don't exist, just that I've not seen one in my limited experience of > AT&T Unix SVR2, Xenix V7 and SIII, Apollo DomainOS, and Solaris). A thought just hit me as I browsed this: Jonathon, do you want to do this to allow for load balancing? mark _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos