2010/4/21 Jesús M. Navarro <jesus.nava...@andago.com>:
> I Bliss:
>
> On Wednesday 21 April 2010 20:33:26 Bill Weiss wrote:
>> All,
>>
>> I'm just getting started with puppet, so excuse any lack of vocabulary
>> in this email.
>>
>> I've got a server (CentOS 5.4) running with a little more than the
>> example puppet configuration.  Importantly, I'm using the supplied
>> auth.conf, and the relevant portion looks like this:
>>     path ~ ^/catalog/([^/]+)$
>>     method find
>>     allow $1
>>
>> I just created a new VM as a puppet client (also CentOS 5.4), which
>> calls itself ib3stage.domainI. (with trailing dot).
>
> While probably on the verge of bein technically correct (after all the ending
> dot is the mark for the root domain) is quite extrange ending FQDNs with the
> dot outside declarations on DNSs.  May I ask why such a extrange host name
> (why not just  ib3stage.domainI)?

Because my company owns domainI.com. , and uses domainI. internally.
So, to disambiguate, I use domainI. for internal systems.

I'm pretty sure that I can change this machine to not be rooted, but
software that handles FQDNs should accept rooted domains.  How it's
handled could be up to debate (though it seems simple to me), but just
dropping it on the floor doesn't seem right.

-- 
Bill Weiss
^[:wq

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