On Thu, 2005-04-28 at 19:41 -0400, Donald Casey wrote: > > > -----Original Message----- > > From: fedora-test-list-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx [mailto:fedora-test-list- > > bounces@xxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams > > Sent: Thursday, April 28, 2005 7:29 PM > > To: For testers of Fedora Core development releases > > Subject: Re: DHCP to give out domain.tld > > > > On Thu, 2005-04-28 at 19:18 -0400, Donald Casey wrote: > > > I know this is probably the wrong place to ask this but... > > > > > > Can someone quickly tell me how to let DHCP set the domain.tld for a > > > machine. IE if I set the system name in /etc/hosts > > > > "option domain-name" in dhcpd.conf. > > > > -- > > Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams <ivazquez@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > > http://fedora.ivazquez.net/ > > > > gpg --keyserver hkp://subkeys.pgp.net --recv-key 38028b72 > > Ignacio, > > My DHCP server is already configured to give out the domain.tld, which it > passes out properly to MS machines. What I am looking for is how to make the > Linux clients get the same info, while I want to define the machine name at > the local machine, just like MS. If I use just the machine name in > /etc/hosts not everything work just right. If I put in the entire name I get > machine.domain.tld.domain.tld in /var/lib/dhcpd/dhcp-leases and other > machine on my LAN will not use DNS to resolve this. Try putting "machine.domain.tld." in /etc/hosts. -- Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams <ivazquez@xxxxxxxxxxxx> http://fedora.ivazquez.net/ gpg --keyserver hkp://subkeys.pgp.net --recv-key 38028b72
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