NAME
hostname
—
host name resolution
description
DESCRIPTION
Hostnames are domains. A domain is a hierarchical, dot-separated list of subdomains. For example, the machine “monet
”, in the
“Berkeley
” subdomain of the
“EDU
” subdomain of the Internet Domain
Name System would be represented as
monet.Berkeley.EDU
(with no trailing dot).
Hostnames are often used with network client and server programs, which must generally translate the name to an address for use. (This task is usually performed by the library routine gethostbyname(3).) The default method for resolving hostnames by the Internet name resolver is to follow RFC 1535's security recommendations. Actions can be taken by the administrator to override these recommendations and to have the resolver behave the same as earlier, non-RFC 1535 resolvers.
The default method (using RFC 1535 guidelines) follows:
If the name consists of a single component, i.e. contains no dot,
and if the environment variable
“HOSTALIASES
” is set to the name of a
file, that file is searched for a string matching the input hostname. The
file should consist of lines made up of two strings separated by
white-space, the first of which is the hostname alias, and the second of
which is the complete hostname to be substituted for that alias. If a
case-insensitive match is found between the hostname to be resolved and the
first field of a line in the file, the substituted name is looked up with no
further processing.
If there is at least one dot in the name, then the name is first
tried “as-is”. The number of dots to cause this action is
configurable by setting the threshold using the
“ndots
” option in
/etc/resolv.conf (default: 1). If the name ends with
a dot, the trailing dot is removed, and the remaining name is looked up
(regardless of the setting of the ndots
option),
without further processing.
If the input name does not end with a trailing dot, it is looked
up by searching through a list of domains until a match is found. If neither
the search option in the /etc/resolv.conf file or
the “LOCALDOMAIN
” environment variable
is used, then the search list of domains contains only the full domain
specified by the domain
option (in
/etc/resolv.conf) or the domain used in the local
hostname. For example, if the “domain
”
option is set to CS.Berkeley.EDU
, then only
CS.Berkeley.EDU
will be in the search list, and this
will be the only domain appended to the partial hostname. For example, if
“lithium
” is the name to be resolved,
this would make lithium.CS.Berkeley.EDU
the only
name to be tried using the search list.
If the search
option is used in
/etc/resolv.conf or the environment variable
“LOCALDOMAIN
” is set by the user, then
the search list will include what is set by these methods. For example, if
the “search
” option contained
CS.Berkeley.EDU CChem.Berkeley.EDU
Berkeley.EDU
then the partial hostname (e.g.,
“lithium
”) will be tried with
each domain name
appended (in the same order specified); the resulting hostnames that would
be tried are:
lithium.CS.Berkeley.EDU lithium.CChem.Berkeley.EDU lithium.Berkeley.EDU
The environment variable
“LOCALDOMAIN
” overrides the
“search
” and
“domain
” options, and if both
search
and domain
options
are present in the resolver configuration file, then only the
last one listed is
used (see
resolv.conf(5)).
If the name was not previously tried “as-is” (i.e.,
it fell below the “ndots
” threshold or
did not contain a dot), then the name as originally provided is
attempted.
ENVIRONMENT
LOCALDOMAIN
- Affects domains appended to partial hostnames.
HOSTALIASES
- Name of file containing (host alias, full hostname) pairs.
FILES
- /etc/resolv.conf
- See resolv.conf(5).