>The service you are referring to is hostnamed [1]. hostnamed is >designed to start on request and terminate after an idle period. >Programs on your computer are probably querying the service to >determine if your hostname has changed. I see that I couldn't previously find it with systemctl because it is a "static" service, neither enabled nor disabled. What is "static" really intended to mean here? The other static services seem to be boot-time related for the most part, eg anaconda, pvscan.... Man for hostnamectl (also new to me) indicates some potential uses for the hostnamed-maintained names, yet I see nothing obvious making use of that info. Can you give me an example? Thanks for the clues.....Nick Geovanis >Date: Sun, 27 Dec 2015 18:14:55 -0700 >From: Brandon Vincent <Brandon.Vincent@xxxxxxx> >To: CentOS mailing list <centos@xxxxxxxxxx> >Subject: Re: hostname service? >Message-ID: <CAJm423-e2+EnrDyaSvt4RKUXPsAZNbW8V9muexNAm7F150EZXQ@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> >Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 >On Sun, Dec 27, 2015 at 4:03 PM, Nicholas Geovanis ><nickgeovanis@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On CentOS 7, I find in /var/log/messages several times daily messages >> "localhost systemd: Started Hostname Service.". However I can't seem t>o >> find such a service using the systemctl command. What is the >"Hostname >> Service", what does it do and why is it being restarted frequently? Many >> thanks....Nick >Hi Nick, >The service you are referring to is hostnamed [1]. hostnamed is >designed to start on request and terminate after an idle period. >Programs on your computer are probably querying the service to >determine if your hostname has changed. >This is normal behavior. >Brandon Vincent _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos