YPSET

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
OPTIONS
DIAGNOSTICS
SEE ALSO
NOTES

NAME

ypset - point ypbind at a particular server

SYNOPSIS

/usr/sbin/ypset [ -d domain ] [ -h host ] server

DESCRIPTION

ypset tells ypbind to get the Network Information Service ( NIS ) for the specified domain from the ypserv process running on server. If server is down, or is not running ypserv, this is not discovered until an NIS client process tries to get a binding for the domain. At this point, the binding set by ypset is tested by ypbind. If the binding is invalid, ypbind attempts to rebind for the same domain.

ypset is useful for binding a client node which is not on a broadcast net, or is on a broadcast net which is not running an NIS server host. It also is useful for debugging NIS client applications, for instance where an NIS map only exists at a single NIS server host.

In cases where several hosts on the local net are supplying NIS services, it is possible for ypbind to rebind to another host even while you attempt to find out if the ypset operation succeeded. For example, you can type:

example% ypset host1
example% ypwhich
host2

which can be confusing. This is a function of the NIS service subsystem’s attempt to load-balance among the available NIS servers, and occurs when host1 does not respond to ypbind because it is not running ypserv (or is overloaded), and host2, running ypserv, gets the binding.

server indicates the NIS server to bind to, and can be specified as a name or an IP address. If specified as a name, ypset attempts to use NIS services to resolve the name to an IP address. This works only if the node has a current valid binding for the domain in question. In most cases, server should be specified as an IP address.

OPTIONS

-hhost

Set ypbind’s binding on host, instead of locally. host can be specified as a name or as an IP address.

-ddomain

Use domain , instead of the default domain.

DIAGNOSTICS

Sorry, I couldn’t send my rpc message to ypbind on host name

The user is not root, or ypbind was run without one of the -ypset flags. See ypserv(8) for explanations of the -ypset flags.

SEE ALSO

ypwhich(1), ypserv(8)

NOTES

The Network Information Service ( NIS ) was formerly known as Yellow Pages ( YP ). The functionality of the two remains the same; only the name has changed. The name Yellow Pages is a registered trademark in the United Kingdom of British Telecommunications plc, and may not be used without permission.