Joe Holden wrote:
Brooks Davis wrote:
On Tue, Oct 24, 2006 at 09:16:07AM +0200, Harti Brandt wrote:
On Mon, 23 Oct 2006, Joe Holden wrote:
JH>Andrey V. Elsukov wrote:
JH>> Doug Barton wrote:
JH>>> If you're talking about a laptop where you're not sure what the DHCP
JH>>> server is going to send you, then I have this in /etc/rc.local:
JH>>
JH>> Hi, Doug.
JH>>
JH>> What you think about adding a new feature to dhclient - Alternate IP
JH>> Configuration. This configuration can be specified in dhclient.conf
JH>> and take effect when a DHCP server not respond. MS Windows have a
JH>> similar feature.
JH>>
JH>Really I was hoping dhclient would have this sort of functionality where
JH>it would resolve the ip given and set that as hostname, as as far as im
JH>aware, isc-dhcpd will not send hostnames?
Sure it does. On my machines I set hostname to "" in rc.conf and let
dhclient set it. Works fine.
Once upon a time I implemented some code to add a default_hostname
variable to rc.conf which was then used by the startup scripts and
dhclient-script to allow the local network to override the name if
desired while insuring that the system had a name at all times (required
for laptop use). I'd take patches to do this.
-- Brooks
P.S. hacking this into rc.local won't work longterm because addresses
will be assigned in a totally different context.
I wasn't suggesting it as a long term fix, I was just trying to answer
the OP's question. :)
I wrote an rc.d script called updatehost that does this, its called
after other net scripts, and basically gets the ip from $interface (set
by updatehost_flags="blah0" in rc.conf, and resolves that, seems to
work, a dirty hack but it does the trick.
My only concern with that as a longer term solution would be not
interfering with a hostname set by dhclient if one exists. I'd have to
think more about the different possible combinations here ...
Doug
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