On 05/12/2009 04:50:57 PM, Shashank wrote: > See your issue? > No matter who (m?) you try to nslookup, it returns the same IP > address: > 63.251.179.5 > > Can you provide cat /etc/nsswitch output? Please provide this output > on both system A and B. > > Specifically we are looking for the following entry: > > hosts: files dns (Your file may have it in reverse order, if > it > does please change it to look like what I posted and then try again) > /etc/nsswitch.conf is completely stock on both systems. In particular, the hosts line is as you write it above. That's the bad news. The good news is that after both systems hibernated overnight, when I resumed them, all of the connections work as they should. I can ssh from A to B, B is able to NFS mount directories from A. Given that hibernate/resume is supposed to preserve/restore the state of the system, I can't imagine what is going on. I did reboot both systems yesterday without having any effect on the problem. Thanks to all who offered advice. If anyone wishes to pursue the issue further I would be happy to do so. > > > > > root@mtranch[27]->nslookup mtranch > > Server: 192.168.10.1 > > Address: 192.168.10.1#53 > > > > Non-authoritative answer: > > Name: mtranch.mtranch.com > > Address: 63.251.179.5 > > > > root@mtranch[28]->nslookup mtranchw > > Server: 192.168.10.1 > > Address: 192.168.10.1#53 > > > > Non-authoritative answer: > > Name: mtranchw.mtranch.com > > Address: 63.251.179.5 > > > >> Hopefully that will help us resolve your issue. > > > > > -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines