On Sun, 2009-06-28 at 17:38 +0200, Niki Kovacs wrote: > Hi. > > I just setup one of my machines as a DHCP server. I'd like it to handle > the hostnames of clients. Don't know if this is an orthodox thing to do I really don't know if it's "orthodox" or not, but I've been doing it like this for years. ;^> > > (feel free to add your comments :oD). Here's the server's relevant lines > of dhcpd.conf: > > --8<------- > ... > # Envoyer les noms d'hôtes aux clients > use-host-decl-names on; > > # Adresses statiques > host babasse { > hardware ethernet 00:0d:61:ae:6b:8f; > fixed-address 192.168.1.249; > } > --8<------- This config is just about identical to mine. > > Now the question is: how should the configuration look like on the > client side, so the hostname gets effetively fetched from the DHCP > server? During the initial install, I assigned hostnames manually to > every machine. Unless you have modified the DHCP client config, the machine SHOULD get the hostname by default. You can verify this by checking the contents of /var/lib/dhclient/dhclient-eth0.leases to see the data that the client has gotten from the server. Since I let my client machines get all this from DHCP during installation, I'm not completely sure what you need to do to make the manually-assigned hostname go away. I THINK that if you comment out the line for the host's IP address in /etc/hosts the system will use the hostname from DHCP, but I haven't exercised that stuff in years. > > Cheers, > > Niki Kovacs > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos -- Ron Loftin reloftin@xxxxxxxxxxxx "God, root, what is difference ?" Piter from UserFriendly _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos