Andres Perera andre...@zoho.com wrote:
don't know if you can use
supersede domain-name ;
this constantly comes up on the list for some reason. it shouldn't
because it doesn't do anything
I pointed some months ago to this problem.
It seems the only clean alternative is to write your own
On 12 January 2012 13:33, sc...@web.de wrote:
BTW, what seems to work is:
supersede domain-name .;
Makes sense, because the . means root (i.e. the domain name root),
which incidentally is why http://www.openbsd.org./ also works.
On 01/12/12 18:18, ropers wrote:
On 12 January 2012 13:33,sc...@web.de wrote:
BTW, what seems to work is:
supersede domain-name .;
Makes sense, because the . means root (i.e. the domain name root),
which incidentally is why http://www.openbsd.org./ also works.
Not incidentally.
On Sun, Jan 1, 2012 at 4:22 PM, bofh goodb...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sun, Jan 1, 2012 at 2:47 PM, Josh Jevosh jev...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello.
I'm installing OpenBSD 5.0. When I configure the networking to DHCP it
goes
ahead and sets the DNS domain name to something that it got from my ISP. I
There are other free ones, but dyndns have been severely abused by all
the cheap router manufacturers. Someone needs to pay the electric
bill. And I believe the sysadmins like to eat every now and then.
If you don't want to pay for it, then it is a want, not a need.
--
Hello.
I'm installing OpenBSD 5.0. When I configure the networking to DHCP it goes
ahead and sets the DNS domain name to something that it got from my ISP. I
would like to only use the short name that I specified as the hostname as
the entire hostname excluding the rest of it that comes from my
On Sun, Jan 1, 2012 at 2:47 PM, Josh Jevosh jev...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello.
I'm installing OpenBSD 5.0. When I configure the networking to DHCP it goes
ahead and sets the DNS domain name to something that it got from my ISP. I
would like to only use the short name that I specified as the
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