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 Project Mouse (v3.4) 
 By Nate Royer
 © 1995-2008

	
 
Project Mouse

rndc - DNS server control utility

Reread the configuration files and restart the dns named service after a change of configuration.

/usr/sbin/rndc reload

RNDC(8) BIND9 RNDC(8) NAME rndc - name server control utility SYNOPSIS rndc [-c config-file] [-k key-file] [-s server] [-p port] [-V] [-y key_id] {command} DESCRIPTION rndc controls the operation of a name server. It supersedes the ndc utility that was provided in old BIND releases. If rndc is invoked with no command line options or arguments, it prints a short summary of the supported commands and the available options and their arguments. rndc communicates with the name server over a TCP connection, sending commands authenticated with digital signatures. In the current versions of rndc and named named the only supported authentication algorithm is HMAC-MD5, which uses a shared secret on each end of the connection. This provides TSIG-style authentication for the command request and the name server's response. All commands sent over the channel must be signed by a key_id known to the server. rndc reads a configuration file to determine how to contact the name server and decide what algorithm and key it should use. OPTIONS -c config-file Use config-file as the configuration file instead of the default, /etc/rndc.conf. -k key-file Use key-file as the key file instead of the default, /etc/rndc.key. The key in /etc/rndc.key will be used to authenticate commands sent to the server if the config-file does not exist. -s server server is the name or address of the server which matches a server statement in the configuration file for rndc. If no server is supplied on the command line, the host named by the default-server clause in the option statement of the configuration file will be used. -p port Send commands to TCP port port instead of BIND 9's default control channel port, 953. -V Enable verbose logging. -y keyid Use the key keyid from the configuration file. keyid must be known by named with the same algorithm and secret string in order for control message validation to succeed. If no keyid is specified, rndc will first look for a key clause in the server statement of the server being used, or if no server statement is present for that host, then the default-key clause of the options statement. Note that the configuration file contains shared secrets which are used to send authenticated control commands to name servers. It should therefore not have general read or write access. For the complete set of commands supported by rndc, see the BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual or run rndc without arguments to see its help message. LIMITATIONS rndc does not yet support all the commands of the BIND 8 ndc utility. There is currently no way to provide the shared secret for a key_id without using the configuration file. Several error messages could be clearer. SEE ALSO rndc.conf(5), named(8), named.conf(5) ndc(8), BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual. AUTHOR Internet Systems Consortium COPYRIGHT Copyright (C) 2004, 2005 Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC") BIND9 June 30, 2000 RNDC(8)


macosx

Open Directory and .htpasswd

Fascinating! I worked on a project* once that involved a complete rewrite of the command-line utility passwd in order to keep a number of system services including a .htpasswd file in sync with users account passwords. Mac OS X Hints noted this is made simple with Mac OS X Leopard (10.5) and Open Directory.


macosx

Virtualized Xserver

Media Temple labs has a private beta for what it’s calling Xserve-Virtual . This system has been added quickly added to my MT wish list along with the Django GridContainer which, perhaps I wont need if I move over to a full-on-mirror of my development environment using a virtual OS X Server.

A virtual Mac OS X Leopard Server running on a fully loaded cluster of Xserves virtualized using Parallels Server . I want one, … or three, … yeah that should be enough …. maybe four, for symmetry.


opensource

Fedora 9 root password mismatch resolution

Having started my journey down the command-line with Fedora 3, I was excited to try out Fedora 9. The install completed with ease (the first time around) but once I logged onto the system and attempted to configure some of the system settings, my root password didn’t work.

Why? CAPS LOCK bit was set by default during the install process making a different root password.



Mac OS XNetworkingOpen SourceProgrammingReferenceSecurity & PrivacySystem Administration

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  ___  _  ___  _  _  ___  ___ 
 /   \/ \/   \| \| |/  _|/ _ \
 |      || | ||  | |\_  \|  _|
 |__|_|_|\___/\____||___/\___/
 Project Mouse (v3.4) 
 By Nate Royer
 © 1995-2008