The need to use FQDNs is, imho, a sign that you don’t
trust your DNS. FQDNs are a PITA if you ask me and I would rather take
the time to make something as mission critical as DNS work right instead of hiding
the real problem. To each his own, I’ve been on contracts before
where the problem was systemic and that was the only way to get backups working
without significant changes in procedures across the company but if your admins
and network guys are doing their job you shouldn’t have to.
I guess my comment is just that ‘you shouldn’t
have to use FQDN’s’ and if you don’t have to I wouldn’t.
To each his own.
Date: Sun, 15 Mar 2009
13:48:49 -0500
From: Ed Wilts <c>
Subject: Re: [Veritas-bu]
question on client names
To:
judy_hinchcliffe AT administaff DOT com
Cc:
VERITAS-BU AT mailman.eng.auburn DOT edu
Message-ID:
<995e39b60903151148taacbbadv84f17f6c60a84860 AT mail.gmail DOT com>
Content-Type: text/plain;
charset="iso-8859-1"
On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 2:06
PM, <judy_hinchcliffe AT administaff DOT com> wrote:
>
>
> So I was just
wondering. When you add servers to netbackup do you use
> short name or FQDN.
>
Always, always use
FQDNs. Short names are simply evil.
.../Ed
Ed Wilts, RHCE, BCFP, BCSD,
SCSP, SCSE
ewilts AT ewilts DOT org
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