The best bet to uninstall DHCP (and any other network settings that were
configured on first install) is to do a sys-unconfig, which resets the
following to their "factory defaults" and halts the system:
required:
/etc/nodename contains the machine's name, of course.
/etc/hostname.* (le0..) names for each interface
/etc/hosts IPs and hostnames for each /etc/hostname.* entry
/etc/inet/hosts IP and hostnames, normally duplicates /etc/hosts
/etc/net/*/hosts should each have the hostname again
optional:
/etc/inet/netmasks network IP and mask if subnetted
/etc/resolv.conf search domain and dns servers
/etc/defaultrouter should be obvious :)
/etc/defaultdomain NIS domain if using NIS
after doing the sys-unconfig, you are prompted to enter all of the new
information upon boot.
Thanks go to:
Raymond Wong [negativl@netcom.com] (especially for the list above)
Matt Simmons [simmonmt@acm.org]
Mark Mellman [mellman@surfcity.ne.mediaone.net]
Alan Orndorff [dwarfie@mindspring.com]
Michael J. Connolly [mjconnly@newton41.ckcorp.com] (the first to suggest
sys-unconfig)
cheers!
amanda
---------------------------------
Amanda K. Dahl
Information Services
BARRA, INC.
2100 Milvia Avenue
Berkeley.CA 94704
adahl@barra.com
---------------------------------
"UNIX was not designed to stop you from doing stupid things, because that
would also stop you from doing clever things." -- Doug Gwyn
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.2 : Fri Sep 28 2001 - 23:12:53 CDT