Shared libraries
Masataka Ohta
mohta at necom830.cc.titech.ac.jp
Mon May 13 17:35:33 AEST 1991
In article <1991May11.100712.27111 at jarvis.csri.toronto.edu>
cks at hawkwind.utcs.toronto.edu (Chris Siebenmann) writes:
>| Thus, the capability to return multiple IP addresses are added because of
>| DNS.
> And this is a bug in 4.2BSD, rightfully corrected in 4.3 while they
>were changing it anyways. It just so happens that it doesn't usually
>matter which IP address a gethostname() returns, so few people cared
>about the breakage.
It is not a bug. There is trade off. If multiple IP addresses are
represented by a single hostname, you can't use a hostname to specify a
specific IP address. For example, you can't "ifconfig" with a symbolic
hostname.
If you insist on using symbolic name, you may use hostname alias, which
is unique to each IP address. But, it can not be CNAME. So, it is not
graceful.
On the other hand, with multiple IP addresses, authentification is
simplified, as I already stated.
Your two authentification related examples:
>- things which use hostnames as the permission mechanism,
>- Things which add permissions based on IPs got from hostname lookups;
> Both problems have bitten us locally; they are quite real.
are not problems. It is avoided simply by registering all of hostnames
in the authentification data.
Masataka Ohta
More information about the Comp.unix.internals
mailing list