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Date:      Thu, 8 Feb 2001 22:01:33 +0100
From:      Cliff Sarginson <cliff@raggedclown.net>
To:        Nick Rogness <nick@rogness.net>
Cc:        Eric Fiterman <fiterman@torrentnet.com>, freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG, freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: multiple IP addresses in /etc/hosts
Message-ID:  <20010208220133.E1453@raggedclown.net>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSF.4.21.0102081106440.99347-100000@cody.jharris.com>; from nick@rogness.net on Thu, Feb 08, 2001 at 11:09:01AM -0600
References:  <3A82CC57.3D1F5AB4@torrentnet.com> <Pine.BSF.4.21.0102081106440.99347-100000@cody.jharris.com>

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On Thu, Feb 08, 2001 at 11:09:01AM -0600, Nick Rogness wrote:
> On Thu, 8 Feb 2001, Eric Fiterman wrote:
> 
> > Hi:
> > 
> >   Is it possible to have an application like ping or telnet iterate
> > through IP addresses for a given hostname, if a previous attempt fails?
> > 
> >   For example:
> > 
> >   in /etc/hosts:
> > ---------------
> >   0.0.0.1 testhost
> >   0.0.0.2 testhost
> >   0.0.0.3 testhost
> > ---------------
> > 
> > If I attempt to 'ping testhost', and the first entry (0.0.0.1) fails, is
> > there anything to configure which would allow an automatic attempt to
> > ping 0.0.0.2? Is this possible?
> 
> 	AFAIK, not with /etc/hosts.  You could do round-robin DNS with
> 	named but it will never be 100% of what you want to do. DNS does
> 	not keep track of which hosts are dead or alive.

Well, as far as ping goes you could do this in a very simple
way with a script that parses the hosts file and presents each
IP as an argument..or am I missing something here ?

Cliff


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