On Fri, 2012-08-31 at 23:28 -0600, Bob Proulx wrote: [lots of great stuff] Thank you for sharing that information.
I think also the hostname sometimes may be set by a dhcp server, right? Is it possible to set the hostname inside a chroot to something other than the main system's name? I tried editing the chroot's /etc/hostname without effect. The snipped explanation said /etc/hostname takes effect because of some init scripts; since they never ran in the chroot that explains why simply editing that file does not work. Since hostname is set in the kernel and the chroot shares the kernel with the host system, it sounds as if they have to have the same name. Put differently, if I did run the necessary startup script inside the chroot it would also change the hostname of the host system. Is that right? It may be relevant that the chroot shares key system info with the host. The host fstab sets things up with /dev/daisy/chroot /mnt/chroot ext3 defaults 0 2 proc-testing /mnt/chroot/proc proc defaults 0 0 sysfs-testing /mnt/chroot/sys sysfs defaults 0 0 /dev /mnt/chroot/dev rbind defaults,rbind 0 0 I know the sharing is insecure, but things didn't work right inside the chroot unti I did it. I care about the chroot hostname mostly for 2 reasons: the prompt displayed in the shell and the name that appears in syslog. The former I could fix by resetting the PS1 environment variable, but I don't know if there's anything I can do about syslog. Ross Boylan -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/1346531778.10694.17.ca...@corn.betterworld.us