On Wed, 2008-11-12 at 11:10 -0700, Michal Jaegermann wrote:
And how that is supposed to happen without a reboot if renames occur
only if a name was 'localhost' or 'locahost.localdomain' and only
the first time an interface was going up after a reboot? That person
who implemented that for 'network' service had some clue.
If you rebooted then all your objections are an undiluted garbage.
The problem was that your initial hostname would get set to something
like dhcp49.homelan.blah and it would resolve out to 192.168.10.49 or
some such. Then you'd to go a coffee shop and you'd have a problem.
Either your hostname would have to change, or the hosts entry for what
it resolved to would have to change, because your address is changing.
And if that previous address is still resolvable via dns (think vpn
access back to the home) you're now overriding dns which is wrong.
The work around I had was to set hostname up once, resolve it to
127.0.0.1 and call it a day. Nothing would ever fiddle with my hostname
nor it's resolution and I could hop networks with ease.
--
Jesse Keating
Fedora -- Freedom² is a feature!
identi.ca:
http://identi.ca/jkeating