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RE: Question about CLASS= & classname
- To: <hobbit (at) hswn.dk>
- Subject: RE: Question about CLASS= & classname
- From: "Aiello, Steve \(GE, Corporate, consultant\)" <steve.aiello (at) ge.com>
- Date: Fri, 21 Jul 2006 07:39:30 -0400
- Thread-index: Acamg4wXYcUNhtxQTLy3hZp6l+ER7AGNigBQ
- Thread-topic: Question about CLASS= & classname
Was just curious if anyone had any information, or docs I missed that
details CLASS= more.
Thanks,
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Aiello, Steve (GE, Corporate, consultant)
> Sent: Thursday, July 13, 2006 9:52 AM
> To: 'hobbit (at) hswn.dk'
> Subject: Question about CLASS= & classname
>
>
> Per the hobbit-clients.cfg documentation I read the following:
> CLASS=classname Rule match by the client class-name. You specify
> the class-name for a host when starting the client through the
> "--class=NAME" option to the runclient.sh script. If no class is
> specified, the host by default goes into a class named by the
> operating system.
>
> My questions:
> The default classname setting of the operating system, which
> value is it ? When I look at the client data of a host I see
> the following:
> [uname]
> Linux serverName 2.6.16-gentoo-r7 i686
> [osversion]
> Gentoo Base System version 1.6.14
>
> Is the default value of classname set to [uname] or
> [osversion]. Also is it the full name ? If so do I define my
> CLASS="Linux serverName 2.6.16-gentoo-r7 i686" ? Can regular
> expresion be used, CLASS=%Linux.* ?
>
> Can a host be defined to more than one class, i.e.
> 1.2.3.4 serverName # ssh CLASS:Linux CLASS:webServer
>
> If a host can have more than one class definition, what
> happens when you get CLASS configuration parameter collision ?
>
> Also, it may bee helpful to have the Info report show which
> class the device falls under.
>
> Thank you,
> Steve
>