Administration (General): Difference between revisions

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:On any running Linux system you can change its hostname with the command ‘hostname‘.
:On any running Linux system you can change its hostname with the command ‘hostname‘.


::'''<code>#hostname</code>''' without any parameter it will output the current hostname of the system.
::'''<code>hostname</code>''' without any parameter it will output the current hostname of the system.


::'''<code>hostname –fd</code>''' will output the fully qualified domain name (or FQDN) of the system.
::'''<code>hostname –f</code>''' will output the fully qualified domain name (or FQDN) of the system.


::'''<code>hostname NEW_NAME</code>''' will set the hostname of the system to NEW_NAME. This is active right away and will remain like that until the system will be rebooted (because at system boot it will set this from some particular file configurations - see bellow how to set this permanently). You will most probably need to exit the current shell in order to see the change in your shell prompt.
::'''<code>hostname NEW_NAME</code>''' will set the hostname of the system to NEW_NAME. This is active right away and will remain so  until the system is rebooted (because at system boot it sets this from some particular file configuration - see bellow how to set this permanently). You will most probably need to exit the current shell in order to see the change in your shell prompt.




[[Category:Tutorials]]
[[Category:Tutorials]]

Latest revision as of 10:23, 30 January 2013

Hostname

You can change a Slackware box's hostname by two methods:

1) Edit /etc/HOSTNAME

2) Use the hostname command-

On any running Linux system you can change its hostname with the command ‘hostname‘.
hostname without any parameter it will output the current hostname of the system.
hostname –f will output the fully qualified domain name (or FQDN) of the system.
hostname NEW_NAME will set the hostname of the system to NEW_NAME. This is active right away and will remain so until the system is rebooted (because at system boot it sets this from some particular file configuration - see bellow how to set this permanently). You will most probably need to exit the current shell in order to see the change in your shell prompt.