source: chapter07/hosts.xml@ 835892c

Last change on this file since 835892c was 6a0e6f3, checked in by Matthew Burgess <matthew@…>, 20 years ago
  • Remove the spurious <info> tags that I thought were necessary but evidently aren't

git-svn-id: http://svn.linuxfromscratch.org/LFS/branches/LFS-RNG/BOOK@4387 4aa44e1e-78dd-0310-a6d2-fbcd4c07a689

  • Property mode set to 100644
File size: 2.9 KB
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1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
2<!DOCTYPE section [
3 <!ENTITY % general-entities SYSTEM "../general.ent">
4 %general-entities;
5]>
6<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/docbook-ng"
7 xml:id="ch-scripts-hosts">
8<title>Creating the /etc/hosts file</title>
9<?dbhtml filename="hosts.html"?>
10
11<indexterm zone="ch-scripts-hosts"><primary sortas="e-/etc/hosts">/etc/hosts</primary></indexterm>
12
13<indexterm zone="ch-scripts-hosts">
14<primary sortas="d-localnet">localnet</primary>
15<secondary>/etc/hosts</secondary></indexterm>
16
17<indexterm zone="ch-scripts-hosts">
18<primary sortas="d-network">network</primary>
19<secondary>/etc/hosts</secondary></indexterm>
20
21<para>If a network card is to be configured, you have to decide on the
22IP-address, FQDN and possible aliases for use in the <filename>/etc/hosts</filename> file. The
23syntax is:</para>
24
25<screen>&lt;IP address&gt; myhost.example.org aliases</screen>
26
27<para>Unless your computer is to be visible to the Internet (e.g., you have a
28registered domain and a valid block of assigned IP addresses - most of us don't
29have this) you should make sure that the IP-address is in the private network
30IP-address range. Valid ranges are:</para>
31
32<screen> Class Networks
33 A 10.0.0.0
34 B 172.16.0.0 through 172.31.0.0
35 C 192.168.0.0 through 192.168.255.0</screen>
36
37<para>A valid IP address could be 192.168.1.1. A valid FQDN for this IP could
38be www.linuxfromscratch.org (not recommended as this is a valid registered domain
39address and could cause your domain name server problems).</para>
40
41<para>If you aren't going to use a network card, you still need to
42come up with a FQDN. This is necessary for certain programs to operate
43correctly.</para>
44
45<para>If a network card is not going to be configured, create the
46<filename>/etc/hosts</filename> file by running:</para>
47
48<screen><userinput>cat &gt; /etc/hosts &lt;&lt; "EOF"
49# Begin /etc/hosts (no network card version)
50
51127.0.0.1 <replaceable>[&lt;value of HOSTNAME&gt;.example.org]</replaceable> <replaceable>[value of HOSTNAME]</replaceable> localhost
52
53# End /etc/hosts (no network card version)
54EOF</userinput></screen>
55
56<para>If a network card is to be configured, create the
57<filename>/etc/hosts</filename> file by running:</para>
58
59<screen><userinput>cat &gt; /etc/hosts &lt;&lt; "EOF"
60# Begin /etc/hosts (network card version)
61
62127.0.0.1 localhost
63<replaceable>[192.168.1.1]</replaceable> <replaceable>[&lt;value of HOSTNAME&gt;.example.org]</replaceable> <replaceable>[value of HOSTNAME]</replaceable>
64
65# End /etc/hosts (network card version)
66EOF</userinput></screen>
67
68<para>Of course, the <replaceable>[192.168.1.1]</replaceable> and <replaceable>[&lt;value of HOSTNAME&gt;.example.org]</replaceable>
69have to be changed to your liking (or requirements if assigned an IP-address
70by a network/system administrator and this machine is planned to be connected
71to an existing network).</para>
72
73</section>
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