Displaying 4 results from an estimated 4 matches for "domainnma".
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domainnmae
2016 Apr 05
0
How to set hostname and domainnmae in CentOS 7?
On 5 April 2016 at 20:24, Joe Smithian <joe.smithian at gmail.com> wrote:
> We can permanently set hostname using hostnamectl set-hostname. How can we
> permanently set *domain name* in CentOS 7?
> I found an article
> <
> http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/239920/how-to-set-the-fully-qualified-hostname-on-centos-7-0
> >
> that recommended setting FQDN using
2016 Apr 06
0
How to set hostname and domainnmae in CentOS 7?
On 6 April 2016 at 15:45, Mark Haney <mark.haney at vifprogram.com> wrote:
> Not sure about everyone else, but I always put my hostname in /etc/hosts.
> Maybe that's from years of not always having DNS available back when the
> earth was cooling.
>
>
This behaviour plays havoc with templated VMs though or any time you can't
be sure the IP there will be correct ...
At
2016 Apr 06
2
How to set hostname and domainnmae in CentOS 7?
Not sure about everyone else, but I always put my hostname in /etc/hosts.
Maybe that's from years of not always having DNS available back when the
earth was cooling.
On Apr 5, 2016 16:30, "James Hogarth" <james.hogarth at gmail.com> wrote:
> On 5 April 2016 at 20:24, Joe Smithian <joe.smithian at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > We can permanently set hostname using
2016 Apr 05
4
How to set hostname and domainnmae in CentOS 7?
We can permanently set hostname using hostnamectl set-hostname. How can we
permanently set *domain name* in CentOS 7?
I found an article
<http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/239920/how-to-set-the-fully-qualified-hostname-on-centos-7-0>
that recommended setting FQDN using hostnamectl. Is that the right way to
set hostname and domainname at the same time using *hostnamectl
set-hostname*