Si probleme(s) avec NIS : (HPUX)
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Si probleme(s) avec NIS :
If You Receive an NIS "Server Not
Responding" Message
Issue the /usr/sbin/ping(1M) command on
the NIS client to make sure the NIS server is up and is reachable on
the network. If the ping command fails, either the server is down, or
the network has a problem. If the server is down, reboot it, or wait
for it to come back up. For information on troubleshooting network
problems, see Installing and Administering LAN/9000 Software .
To boot your NIS client without waiting
for the server to come up, boot the client in single user mode, set
NIS_CLIENT=0 in the /etc/rc.config.d/namsvrs file, then boot your
client the rest of the way up.
Issue the domainname command (with no
arguments) on both the NIS server and the NIS client to check whether
their domain names are the same. If they are different, log in as
root to the NIS client and issue the following command to change its
domain name :
domainname domainname
Issue the ps -ef command on the NIS
server to check whether ypserv is running. If it is not, follow these
steps :
1.In the /etc/rc.config.d/namesvrs file
on the NIS server, make sure the following variables are set :
NIS_MASTER_SERVER=1
2.Issue the following command to start
up the NIS server :
/sbin/init.d/nis.server start
Make sure an NIS server exists on the
same subnet as the NIS client. The client broadcasts its bind
request, and it binds to the first server that responds to the
request. Broadcasts do not cross gateways or routers, so the server
must be on the same subnet as the client in order to receive the bind
request. If you cannot configure an NIS server on the same subnet as
your NIS clients, see To Bind an NIS Client to a Server on a
Different Subnet.
If a User Cannot Log In
If the user has recently changed
passwords, ask the user to try logging in with the old password. If
the user can log in using the old password, follow these steps :
1.Issue the ps -ef command on the NIS
master server to make sure the yppasswdd daemon is running. If it is
not, issue the
following command to start all the NIS
server processes :
/sbin/init.d/nis.server start
2.Check the cron scripts on the slave
servers to make sure transfers of the passwd map from the master
server are frequent enough. Once per hour is usually frequent enough,
but frequent map transfers may cause too much network traffic. You
might want to schedule map transfers for late at night, and advise
users to make their password changes just before they go home.
Issue the following command on the NIS
client to determine which master server supplies the passwd map to
the client :
/usr/bin/ypwhich -m passwd
If the server does not respond, see If
You Receive an NIS ’Server Not Responding’ Message.
If the ypwhich command returns the name
of the NIS master server, log in as root to the master server and
make sure the user has an entry in its /etc/passwd file. Then, issue
the following commands on the master server to generate the NIS
passwd database from the /etc/passwd file and push it to the NIS
slave servers :
cd /var/yp
/usr/ccs/bin/make passwd
Issue the domainname command (with no
arguments) to make sure the client’s default domain is the domain
served by the NIS master server. If it is not, log in as root to the
NIS client, and issue the following command to change its domain
name :
domainname domainname
Issue the following command to check
whether the NIS client has an entry in the passwd database on the NIS
server to which it is bound :
/usr/bin/ypmatch username passwd
If the client has no entry in the
passwd database, issue the following command on the NIS server to
which the client is bound :
/usr/sbin/ypxfr passwd
This command transfers the passwd
database from the NIS master server to the server where you issue the
command.
If the user’s NIS client is bound to a
slave server, make sure the slave server is listed in the NIS master
server’s ypservers database. Follow these steps :
1.Issue the following command on the
NIS client to determine which server the client is bound to :
/usr/bin/ypwhich
2.Log into the NIS master server, and
issue the following command :
cd /var/yp/domainname
3.Issue the following command on the
NIS master server to write the contents of the ypservers database to
a temporary file :
/usr/sbin/makedbm -u ypservers >
tempfile
4.If the NIS slave server is not listed
in tempfile, use a text editor to add it, and then issue the
following command to rebuild the ypservers database :
/usr/sbin/makedbm tempfile ypservers
If you are using NIS compat mode, make
sure the NIS escape entry in the /etc/passwd file on the client does
not have an asterisk in the password field. On HP systems, the NIS
escape entry in the /etc/passwd file should be
+: :-2:60001:: :
If You Receive an "Unknown Host"
Message
Issue the following command to trace a
lookup of the unknown host :
/usr/contrib/bin/nsquery hosts hostname
The trace will indicate which name
services (BIND, NIS, NIS+, or /etc/hosts) were queried and in what
order. If your host is not performing lookups the way you want, see
Configuring the Name Service Switch for instructions on configuring
the Name Service Switch.
Issue the following command on the NIS
client to determine which master server supplies the hosts map :
/usr/bin/ypwhich -m hosts
If the server does not respond, see If
You Receive an NIS ’Server Not Responding’ Message.
If the ypwhich command returns the name
of the NIS master server, log in as root to the master server and
make sure the unknown host is listed in its /etc/hosts file. Then,
issue the following commands on the master server to generate the NIS
hosts database from the /etc/hosts file and push it to the NIS slave
servers :
cd /var/yp
/usr/ccs/bin/make hosts
Issue the domainname command (with no
arguments) to make sure the client’s default domain is the domain
served by the NIS master server. If it is not, log in as root to the
NIS client and issue the following command to change its domain name :
domainname domainname
Issue the following command to check
whether the unknown host is listed in the hosts database on the NIS
server to which the client is
bound :
/usr/bin/ypmatch hostname hosts
If the host is not listed in the hosts
database, issue the following command on the NIS server to which the
client is bound :
/usr/sbin/ypxfr hosts
This command transfers the hosts
database from the NIS master server to the server where you issue the
command.
If the NIS client is bound to a slave
server, make sure the slave server is listed in the NIS master
server’s ypservers database. Follow these steps :
1.Issue the following command on the
NIS client to determine which server the client is bound to :
/usr/bin/ypwhich
2.Log in as root to the NIS master
server and issue the following command to change to the directory
where the domain databases reside :
cd /var/yp/domainname
3.On the NIS master server, issue the
following command to write the contents of the ypservers database to
a temporary file :
/usr/sbin/makedbm -u ypservers >
tempfile
4.If the NIS slave server is not listed
in tempfile, use a text editor to add it, and then issue the
following command to rebuild the ypservers database :
/usr/sbin/makedbm tempfile ypservers
If an NIS Client Cannot Bind to a
Server
If NIS commands return any of the
following messages,
ypcat : can’t bind to an NIS server for
domain domainname
ypmatch : can’t match key.
reason : can’t communicate with ypbind
ypwhich : clntudp_create error
RPC_PROG_NOT_REGISTERED
then ypbind is not running on the
client. Issue the following command to start all the NIS client
processes :
/sbin/init.d/nis.client start
If NIS Returns Incorrect Information
Issue the following command on the NIS
client to determine which master server supplies the appropriate NIS
map :
/usr/bin/ypwhich -m mapname
If the server does not respond, see If
You Receive an NIS ’Server Not Responding’ Message.
Log in as root to the NIS master
server, and issue the following command to check the contents of the
appropriate NIS map :
/usr/bin/ypcat -k mapname
If the map contents are not correct,
edit the ASCII file from which the map is generated. Then issue the
following commands to regenerate the map and push it to the slave
servers :
cd /var/yp
/usr/ccs/bin/make mapname
Issue the domainname command (with no
arguments) to make sure the client’s default domain is the domain
served by the NIS master server. If it is not, log in as root to the
NIS client, and issue the following command to change its domain
name :
domainname domainname
Issue the following command on the NIS
client to check the contents of the map on the NIS server to which
the client is bound :
/usr/bin/ypcat -k mapname
If the contents are not correct, log in
as root to the server that serves the NIS client, and issue the
following command :
/usr/sbin/ypxfr mapname
This command transfers the map from the
NIS master server to the server where you issue the command.
If the NIS client is bound to a slave
server, make sure the slave server is listed in the NIS master
server’s ypservers database. Follow these steps :
1.Issue the following command on the
NIS client to determine which server the client is bound to :
/usr/bin/ypwhich
2.Log in as root to the NIS master
server and issue the following command to change to the directory
where the domain databases reside :
cd /var/yp/domainname
3.On the NIS master server, issue the
following command to write the contents of the ypservers database to
a temporary file :
/usr/sbin/makedbm -u ypservers >
tempfile
4.If the NIS slave server is not listed
in tempfile, use a text editor to add it, and then issue the
following command to rebuild the ypservers database :
/usr/sbin/makedbm tempfile ypservers
Make sure the slave servers have cron
scripts that schedule regular updates of the map.
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