I FOUND THE ANSWER!!
Ok my question was about my nodename being randomly changed to -s. There was
no one else on the system, the system was NOT rebooted nor were any cron jobs
running at the timestamp on the /etc/nodename file.
It was baffling!
Ppl said to reset the nodename by doing a uname -S name & some suggested I do a
sysunconfig, others suggested I remove the setuname out of the rc2.d area. I
tried all but the unconfig. And they all worked .... for awhile.
Then today will working on installing apache I went to lunch & finally I found
out what was re-setting the uname!!!
See it was easier for me to do all this editing & makefile stuff in the tcsh
environment (which I didn't use to use). So I'd log in as me, su to root &
then run tcsh. Then if I remained inactive for any length of time tcsh would
auto-logout with this command:
ln -s auto-logout
and my nodename would be switched to -s!!!
I'll stop using tcsh as root (I don't get logged out as me!)
Thanks for all the suggestions!
erin
-- erin o'neill ------- erin@factory.net Systems Administrator ------- voice:(650) 312-7885 N/Volve -------- www.nvolve.com --------
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.2 : Fri Sep 28 2001 - 23:12:31 CDT