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HOSTS(5)                   Linux Programmer’s Manual                  HOSTS(5)



NAME
       hosts - The static table lookup for host names

SYNOPSIS
       /etc/hosts

DESCRIPTION
       This manual page describes the format of the /etc/hosts file. This file is a simple
       text file that associates IP addresses with hostnames, one line per IP address. For
       each host a single line should be present with the following information:

              IP_address canonical_hostname aliases

       Fields  of  the  entry are separated by any number of blanks and/or tab characters.
       Text from a "#" character until the end of the line is a comment, and  is  ignored.
       Host names may contain only alphanumeric characters, minus signs ("-"), and periods
       (".").  They must begin with an alphabetic character and end with  an  alphanumeric
       character.   Aliases  provide  for name changes, alternate spellings, shorter host-
       names, or generic hostnames (for example, localhost).  The format of the host table
       is described in RFC 952.

       The Berkeley Internet Name Domain (BIND) Server implements the Internet name server
       for UNIX systems. It augments or replaces the /etc/hosts file or host name  lookup,
       and frees a host from relying on /etc/hosts being up to date and complete.

       In  modern  systems,  even  though the host table has been superseded by DNS, it is
       still widely used for:

       bootstrapping
              Most systems have a small host table containing the name and address  infor-
              mation  for important hosts on the local network. This is useful when DNS is
              not running, for example during system bootup.

       NIS    Sites that use NIS use the host table as input to  the  NIS  host  database.
              Even  though NIS can be used with DNS, most NIS sites still use the host ta-
              ble with an entry for all local hosts as a backup.

       isolated nodes
              Very small sites that are isolated from  the  network  use  the  host  table
              instead  of DNS. If the local information rarely changes, and the network is
              not connected to the Internet, DNS offers little advantage.

EXAMPLE
        127.0.0.1       localhost
        192.168.1.10    foo.mydomain.org  foo
        192.168.1.13    bar.mydomain.org  bar
        216.234.231.5   master.debian.org      master
        205.230.163.103 www.opensource.org

HISTORICAL NOTE
       Before the advent of DNS, the host table was the only way of resolving hostnames on
       the  fledgling  Internet. Indeed, this file could be created from the official host
       data base maintained at the Network Information Control Center (NIC), though  local
       changes  were  often  required  to bring it up to date regarding unofficial aliases
       and/or unknown hosts.  The NIC no longer  maintains  the  hosts.txt  files,  though
       looking  around at the time of writing (circa 2000), there are historical hosts.txt
       files on the WWW. I just found three, from 92, 94, and 95.

FILES
       /etc/hosts

SEE ALSO
       hostname(1) resolver(3), resolver(5), hostname(7), named(8), Internet RFC 952

AUTHOR
       This manual page was written by Manoj  Srivastava  <srivasta AT debian.org>,  for  the
       Debian GNU/Linux system.



Debian                            2002-06-16                          HOSTS(5)

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