1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
|
#!/bin/sh -
#
# $NetBSD: netstart,v 1.23 1995/12/30 01:30:03 thorpej Exp $
# @(#)netstart 5.9 (Berkeley) 3/30/91
# set these to "NO" to turn them off. otherwise, they're used as flags
routed_flags=-q
mrouted_flags=NO # for 'normal' use: mrouted_flags=""
rarpd_flags=NO # for 'normal' use: rarpd_flags="-a"
bootparamd_flags=NO # for 'normal' use: bootparamd_flags=""
rbootd_flags=NO # for 'normal' use: rbootd_flags=""
sendmail_flags=NO # for 'normal' use: sendmail_flags="-bd -q30m"
named_flags=NO # for 'normal' use: named_flags=""
timed_flags=
# set the following to "YES" to turn them on
rwhod=NO
nfs_server=NO
nfs_client=NO
gated=NO
kerberos_server=NO
amd=NO
# miscellaneous other flags
# only used if the appropriate server is marked YES above
gated_flags=
amd_dir=/amd # AMD's mount directory
amd_master=/etc/amd/master # AMD 'master' map
# /etc/myname contains my symbolic name
#
hostname=`cat /etc/myname`
hostname $hostname
if [ -f /etc/defaultdomain ]; then
domainname `cat /etc/defaultdomain`
fi
# configure all of the interfaces which we know about.
# do this by reading /etc/hostname.* files, where * is the name
# of a given interface.
#
# these files are formatted like the following, but with no # at the
# beginning of the line
#
# addr_family hostname netmask broadcast_addr options
# dest dest_addr
#
# addr_family is the address family of the interface, generally inet
# hostname is the host name that belongs to the interface, in /etc/hosts.
# netmask is the network mask for the interface.
# broadcast_addr is the broadcast address for the interface
# options are misc. options to ifconfig for the interface.
#
# dest is simply the string "dest" (no quotes, though) if the interface
# has a "destination" (i.e. it's a point-to-point link, like SLIP).
# dest_addr is the hostname of the other end of the link, in /etc/hosts
#
# the only required contents of the file are the addr_family field
# and the hostname.
(
tmp="$IFS"
IFS="$IFS."
set -- `echo /etc/hostname*`
IFS=$tmp
unset tmp
while [ $# -ge 2 ] ; do
shift # get rid of "hostname"
(
read af name mask bcaddr extras
read dt dtaddr
if [ ! -n "$name" ]; then
echo "/etc/hostname.$1: invalid network configuration file"
exit
fi
cmd="ifconfig $1 $af $name "
if [ "${dt}" = "dest" ]; then cmd="$cmd $dtaddr"; fi
if [ -n "$mask" ]; then cmd="$cmd netmask $mask"; fi
if [ -n "$bcaddr" -a "X$bcaddr" != "XNONE" ]; then
cmd="$cmd broadcast $bcaddr";
fi
cmd="$cmd $extras"
$cmd
) < /etc/hostname.$1
shift
done
)
# set the address for the loopback interface
ifconfig lo0 inet localhost
# use loopback, not the wire
route add $hostname localhost
# /etc/mygate, if it exists, contains the name of my gateway host
# that name must be in /etc/hosts.
if [ -f /etc/mygate ]; then
route add default `cat /etc/mygate`
fi
# /etc/ifaliases, if it exists, contains the names of additional IP
# addresses for each interface. It is formatted as a series of lines
# that contain
# address interface
if [ -f /etc/ifaliases ]; then
(
set -- `cat /etc/ifaliases`
while [ $# -ge 2 ] ; do
ifconfig $2 inet alias $1
route add $1 localhost
shift 2
done
)
fi
|