Introduction
You
probably
spend most of your time accessing servers on the Internet or on your
own network. In fact, networking has become so prevalent,
it's becoming increasingly difficult to tolerate
even short periods of network outages.
This chapter contains many ideas for accessing networking services
when the conventional avenues seem to be unavailable. Have you ever
wanted to train your system to notify you of its new network
configuration when its primary link becomes unavailable? Would you
like to check your email from a system that doesn't
contain a preconfigured email client? How can you maintain network
connectivity when your ISP's DHCP server no longer
recognizes your DHCP client?
You'll also gain insight into how some of the
networking services and tools we often take for granted work. Become
a tcpdump guru—or at least lose the
intimidation factor. Understand your DNS messages and how to
troubleshoot your DNS servers. Tame your sendmail
daemon.
Finally, meet two excellent open source utilities that allow you to
perform routine tasks simultaneously on all of your servers.
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