ypset - Man Page

bind ypbind to a particular NIS server

Synopsis

ypset [ -d domain ] [ -h hostname ] server

Description

In  order  to run ypset, ypbind must be initiated with the -ypset or -ypsetme options.  See ypbind(8). ypset tells ypbind to get NIS services for the specified domain from the ypserv(8) process running on server.

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 subsystem's attempt to know always a running NIS server, 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 must be specified as a name or an IP address. This will work only if the node has a current valid binding for the domain in question, and ypbind has been set to allow use of ypset. In most  cases, server should be specified as an IP address.

Options

-d domain

Specify a domain other than the default domain as returned by domainname(8).

-h hostname

Set the NIS binding on host hostname
instead of the local machine.

See Also

domainname(8), ypbind(8), ypcat(8), ypmatch(1), ypserv(8), yppoll(8), ypwhich(1)

Author

ypset is part of the yp-tools package, which was written by Thorsten Kukuk <kukuk@linux-nis.org>.

Referenced By

ypbind(8), ypcat(1), yp_dump_binding(8), ypmatch(1), yppoll(8), ypserv(8), ypwhich(1).

April 2010 YP Tools 4.2.3