From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: "Daryl M" To: <9fans@9fans.net> Date: Mon, 7 Apr 2014 19:47:02 -0700 Message-ID: <001a01cf52d4$d2712ad0$77538070$@mc2research.org> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Subject: [9fans] Newby Question on setting hostname Topicbox-Message-UUID: d7bc4176-ead8-11e9-9d60-3106f5b1d025 Greetings, I spent time this weekend experimenting with, and learning about, configuring my Plan9 machine as a simple, DHCP client, terminal. Networking now seems to work reliably: DNS is resolving names, I can ping machines locally and across the internet by both name and IP address. I can also connect to sources at bell labs and browse them. Timezone has been set and I even created another user though I am not yet happy with the results so have more to learn in that area. Now, I want to set the machine's name. From the Plan9 Wiki and searching through the 9fans archives I now know: 1) Editing /rc/bin/termrc to replace the default name, gnot, with my machine's name is "not the right way". 2) A post from earlier this year just said to edit /lib/ndb/local and that there were plenty of examples. In reality, the only examples are for machines with static IP addresses. 3) A post from 2007 said to add an entry to /lib/ndb/local of the form: sys= ether= Replacing with the desired name of my machine and replacing with that machine's MAC address. This works fine, but it could get a bit unwieldy for configuring large numbers of machines. 4) Another post said to just echo -n > /dev/sysname in /rc/bin/termrc.local. I tested it and it also works fine and seems to be the easiest. My question is: What is the REAL preferred method for setting the machine name? #1, #3, #4, or something else? Thank you, Daryl M