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Date:      Tue, 22 Sep 2009 23:08:26 +0200
From:      Andy Kosela <akosela@andykosela.com>
To:        olli@lurza.secnetix.de, jilles@FreeBSD.ORG, freebsd-standards@FreeBSD.ORG, bug-followup@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: standards/137173: `uname -n` incorrect behavior
Message-ID:  <4ab93cca.vZr1%2BIV6M72iTd1N%akosela@andykosela.com>
In-Reply-To: <200909221705.n8MH5NEh064549@lurza.secnetix.de>
References:  <200909221705.n8MH5NEh064549@lurza.secnetix.de>

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Oliver Fromme <olli@lurza.secnetix.de> wrote:

> Just for the record:
> The claim that Solaris doesn't print the FQDN is incorrect.
> Solaris prints whatever the admin has configured in /etc/nodename.
> If the admin has configured the FQDN, "uname -n" will print the FQDN.
> AFAIK it is the same for HP-UX.
>
> So, FreeBSD really behaves the same as Solaris and HP-UX:
> If you configure the hostname to be the FQDN, "uname -n" will print it,
> just like the "hostname" command.

FYI

# uname -a
HP-UX vital15 B.11.23 U ia64 1058748580 unlimited-user license
# uname -n
vital15
# hostname
vital15.testdrive.hp.com

so NODENAME != HOSTNAME

The startup variable NODENAME is the UUCP name which is returned by 
uname -n, while the HOSTNAME variable sets the networking (ARPA, NFS, 
etc) name, which can be 64 chars long (see /usr/include/sys/param.h for
MAXHOSTNAMELEN).  HOSTNAME can be much longer than 8 characters BUT only 
if you define an 8-character or less NODENAME in the 
/etc/rc.config.d/netconf file.

--Andy



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