From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Message-ID: <00ac01c26a16$b9003ae0$db28ff87@bl.belllabs.com> From: "david presotto" To: <9fans@cse.psu.edu> References: <0a43e7dfd43830d10a2ceff45a562456@9fs.org> Subject: Re: [9fans] lnfs MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Date: Wed, 2 Oct 2002 09:22:13 -0400 Topicbox-Message-UUID: fb0357ae-eaca-11e9-9e20-41e7f4b1d025 I'll fix lnfs for you, its a whole line to type but I'll go out of my way just this once... You can't override dns by changing ndb unless you own the domain, i.e., have a soa= in the record for the domain root. A better solution might be to, as collyer suggests, change your rwrite rules so that you redirect the message to where you really would like it to go. ----- Original Message ----- From: To: <9fans@cse.psu.edu> Sent: Wednesday, October 02, 2002 12:29 AM Subject: Re: [9fans] lnfs > > I'm not sure what you mean by flush, fprint is synchronous. > > I could retry the write if you like, though there's not > > much likelyhood that it would work the second time if > > it didn't the first, there's no lock on .longnames, > > it's append only, so a failure is probably the fs or > > someone having removed the file. > > > > .longnames is also written before the file is created, > > so the name should be there should you find the hashed > > file when reading the dir. > > > I stupidly thought the open could fail if someone else had > it open. > > > However, in rreaddir, I don't reread the file while > > translating the short names to long ones. Someone > > could create a file while I'm busy converting the > > dir. There's plenty of window there for someone to > > sneak through. > > I think this is the problem. I had a process running on the > cpu server which walked the tree finding things to do, and > another process on my terminal which added things to the > tree. Perhaps I won't use lnfs after all... > > On another tack, how do I set up /lib/ndb/local so that > mail to a particular site (vitanuova.com) is sent to a particular > machine, in preference to what the public dns says? > I tried > > dom=vitanuova.com mx=wibble pref=10 > > but it doesn't show up in ndb/dnsquery. > >