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How do I rename a Linux host without needing to reboot for the rename to take effect?


Redhat doesn't set my desired hostname on rebootHow do I change the IP address and hostname on Solaris?Apache Subversion and Sudo - Why can't I resolve this hostname?Trouble changing hostname on a Rightscale provisioned CentOS instanceSetting the hostname: FQDN or short name?Ubuntu 10.04 server change ipExim4 with multiple websitesEC2 hostname ubuntu and ejabberdhostname doesn't persist after reboot in CentOS 7 instanceChanging hostname on ubuntu-server (VPS) - recommended or not?













24















I searched for an answer to this question on serverfault and shockingly could not find it. I know it is possible, but I can't remember how to fdo it. How do I change a Linux host's hostname and get that change to take effect without a reboot?



I am using Ubuntu 16 and Ubuntu 18.



A big feature of Ubuntu is the graphical desktop and graphical system utilities. However, we are running Ubuntu in our production environment so we chose not to use the graphical desktop or utilities in order not to have those features consume resources we need in our production environment.



I know that to rename the host, I edit the files:



  • /etc/hostname

  • /etc/hosts

In the /etc/hostname one just replaces the current hostname (soon to be former hostname) with the new hostname.



Ubuntu in the /etc/hosts file has the line:



127.0.1.1 your-hostname your-hostname


It acts as bootstrapping while your host is booting up and establishing itself within your network. Prior to changing the hostname, your-hostname is the current (soon to be former hostname) and as a part of changing your host's hostname, one replaces that name with the new name.



What I am familiar with is executing the above two steps and then rebooting your host. But plenty of times, like with a production server, one would like to execute that rename, but not reboot one's host.



How can I change hostname on a host and get that change to take effect without rebooting the host?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Peter Jirak is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 1





    There's no such thing as "Ubuntu 16" and "Ubuntu 18", there can be as big differences between 16.04 and 16.10 as there are between 16.10 and 17.04.

    – pipe
    19 hours ago















24















I searched for an answer to this question on serverfault and shockingly could not find it. I know it is possible, but I can't remember how to fdo it. How do I change a Linux host's hostname and get that change to take effect without a reboot?



I am using Ubuntu 16 and Ubuntu 18.



A big feature of Ubuntu is the graphical desktop and graphical system utilities. However, we are running Ubuntu in our production environment so we chose not to use the graphical desktop or utilities in order not to have those features consume resources we need in our production environment.



I know that to rename the host, I edit the files:



  • /etc/hostname

  • /etc/hosts

In the /etc/hostname one just replaces the current hostname (soon to be former hostname) with the new hostname.



Ubuntu in the /etc/hosts file has the line:



127.0.1.1 your-hostname your-hostname


It acts as bootstrapping while your host is booting up and establishing itself within your network. Prior to changing the hostname, your-hostname is the current (soon to be former hostname) and as a part of changing your host's hostname, one replaces that name with the new name.



What I am familiar with is executing the above two steps and then rebooting your host. But plenty of times, like with a production server, one would like to execute that rename, but not reboot one's host.



How can I change hostname on a host and get that change to take effect without rebooting the host?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Peter Jirak is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 1





    There's no such thing as "Ubuntu 16" and "Ubuntu 18", there can be as big differences between 16.04 and 16.10 as there are between 16.10 and 17.04.

    – pipe
    19 hours ago













24












24








24


7






I searched for an answer to this question on serverfault and shockingly could not find it. I know it is possible, but I can't remember how to fdo it. How do I change a Linux host's hostname and get that change to take effect without a reboot?



I am using Ubuntu 16 and Ubuntu 18.



A big feature of Ubuntu is the graphical desktop and graphical system utilities. However, we are running Ubuntu in our production environment so we chose not to use the graphical desktop or utilities in order not to have those features consume resources we need in our production environment.



I know that to rename the host, I edit the files:



  • /etc/hostname

  • /etc/hosts

In the /etc/hostname one just replaces the current hostname (soon to be former hostname) with the new hostname.



Ubuntu in the /etc/hosts file has the line:



127.0.1.1 your-hostname your-hostname


It acts as bootstrapping while your host is booting up and establishing itself within your network. Prior to changing the hostname, your-hostname is the current (soon to be former hostname) and as a part of changing your host's hostname, one replaces that name with the new name.



What I am familiar with is executing the above two steps and then rebooting your host. But plenty of times, like with a production server, one would like to execute that rename, but not reboot one's host.



How can I change hostname on a host and get that change to take effect without rebooting the host?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Peter Jirak is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I searched for an answer to this question on serverfault and shockingly could not find it. I know it is possible, but I can't remember how to fdo it. How do I change a Linux host's hostname and get that change to take effect without a reboot?



I am using Ubuntu 16 and Ubuntu 18.



A big feature of Ubuntu is the graphical desktop and graphical system utilities. However, we are running Ubuntu in our production environment so we chose not to use the graphical desktop or utilities in order not to have those features consume resources we need in our production environment.



I know that to rename the host, I edit the files:



  • /etc/hostname

  • /etc/hosts

In the /etc/hostname one just replaces the current hostname (soon to be former hostname) with the new hostname.



Ubuntu in the /etc/hosts file has the line:



127.0.1.1 your-hostname your-hostname


It acts as bootstrapping while your host is booting up and establishing itself within your network. Prior to changing the hostname, your-hostname is the current (soon to be former hostname) and as a part of changing your host's hostname, one replaces that name with the new name.



What I am familiar with is executing the above two steps and then rebooting your host. But plenty of times, like with a production server, one would like to execute that rename, but not reboot one's host.



How can I change hostname on a host and get that change to take effect without rebooting the host?







linux ubuntu hostname






share|improve this question









New contributor




Peter Jirak is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Peter Jirak is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 9 hours ago









psmears

29615




29615






New contributor




Peter Jirak is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 2 days ago









Peter JirakPeter Jirak

13914




13914




New contributor




Peter Jirak is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Peter Jirak is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Peter Jirak is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 1





    There's no such thing as "Ubuntu 16" and "Ubuntu 18", there can be as big differences between 16.04 and 16.10 as there are between 16.10 and 17.04.

    – pipe
    19 hours ago












  • 1





    There's no such thing as "Ubuntu 16" and "Ubuntu 18", there can be as big differences between 16.04 and 16.10 as there are between 16.10 and 17.04.

    – pipe
    19 hours ago







1




1





There's no such thing as "Ubuntu 16" and "Ubuntu 18", there can be as big differences between 16.04 and 16.10 as there are between 16.10 and 17.04.

– pipe
19 hours ago





There's no such thing as "Ubuntu 16" and "Ubuntu 18", there can be as big differences between 16.04 and 16.10 as there are between 16.10 and 17.04.

– pipe
19 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















42














You can change the kernel's idea of the hostname on a systemd-based system using the hostnamectl tool. For example:



hostnamectl set-hostname whatever


You can view the system's current idea of the hostname with:



hostnamectl # equivalent to hostnamectl status


Keep in mind that this does not change a running process's idea of the hostname. Such a process would have to check the hostname again in order to be updated, and almost no process does. Thus such a process would need to be restarted. In order for every process to begin using the new hostname, they must be restarted. It's generally easier to just reboot the system than to restart every service individually.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    Do I need to restart networking on my server if I do not wish to reboot it after the rename? I found this: sudo /etc/init.d/network restart Aside from that, restarting networking on my server via that command your point about restarting any running process that needs to know the server's name is valid. Agreed that restarting the host would fix that. That said, there are times that I really want to rename a host, but really do not want to reboot it. Any opinion about sudo /etc/init.d/network restart and its usefulness in getting the new hostname to take effect wout reboot?

    – Peter Jirak
    yesterday







  • 3





    @PeterJirak: Completely useless. If those programs (which need to know the hostname) didn't bother to watch for hostname updates before, then they won't bother now. Telling the system to reconfigure IP addresses on eth0 won't affect that even a little bit.

    – grawity
    yesterday











  • @PeterJirak What do you mean by "getting the new hostname to take effect"? As previously discussed, it takes effect immediately, and any newly started process will be aware of it. I also don't understand why you're asking about restarting the network? What does that have to do with the hostname?

    – Michael Hampton
    yesterday







  • 5





    It's a common misconception that the entirety of "networking" is a userspace service that can be restarted, just because there's an /etc/init.d script named like that.

    – grawity
    yesterday






  • 1





    @PeterJirak As a side note, running services in /etc/init.d is the wrong way on systemd systems. It is just there for backward compatibility to the old System V.

    – rexkogitans
    22 hours ago



















18














You can change the in-kernel hostname using:



hostname NEWNAME


On Linux this is practically equal to either of the following:



sysctl kernel.hostname=NEWNAME

echo NEWNAME > /proc/sys/kernel/hostname


This does not depend on systemd (unlike hostnamectl which requires systemd-hostnamed) or any other non-standard tools, and often (especially in shellscript-init systems) is how the initial hostname was set in the first place.



Most programs and services don't actually use the hostname; the few which do (e.g. Postfix or services using Kerberos) can be restarted one-by-one.



(Some programs cache the hostname until restart, others query it every time they need it. Programs also have the ability to poll(2) /proc/sys/kernel/hostname to receive change notifications, but few do.)






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    Keep in mind that these methods are not persistent and will not survive a reboot.

    – Michael Hampton
    13 hours ago






  • 2





    Fortunately, OP has already covered persistence in their question itself.

    – grawity
    13 hours ago






  • 1





    postfix may have the host name hard coded in one or two places in /etc/postfix/main.cf and /etc/mailname, so those will need to be edited, too.

    – Mark Plotnick
    10 hours ago











Your Answer








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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









42














You can change the kernel's idea of the hostname on a systemd-based system using the hostnamectl tool. For example:



hostnamectl set-hostname whatever


You can view the system's current idea of the hostname with:



hostnamectl # equivalent to hostnamectl status


Keep in mind that this does not change a running process's idea of the hostname. Such a process would have to check the hostname again in order to be updated, and almost no process does. Thus such a process would need to be restarted. In order for every process to begin using the new hostname, they must be restarted. It's generally easier to just reboot the system than to restart every service individually.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    Do I need to restart networking on my server if I do not wish to reboot it after the rename? I found this: sudo /etc/init.d/network restart Aside from that, restarting networking on my server via that command your point about restarting any running process that needs to know the server's name is valid. Agreed that restarting the host would fix that. That said, there are times that I really want to rename a host, but really do not want to reboot it. Any opinion about sudo /etc/init.d/network restart and its usefulness in getting the new hostname to take effect wout reboot?

    – Peter Jirak
    yesterday







  • 3





    @PeterJirak: Completely useless. If those programs (which need to know the hostname) didn't bother to watch for hostname updates before, then they won't bother now. Telling the system to reconfigure IP addresses on eth0 won't affect that even a little bit.

    – grawity
    yesterday











  • @PeterJirak What do you mean by "getting the new hostname to take effect"? As previously discussed, it takes effect immediately, and any newly started process will be aware of it. I also don't understand why you're asking about restarting the network? What does that have to do with the hostname?

    – Michael Hampton
    yesterday







  • 5





    It's a common misconception that the entirety of "networking" is a userspace service that can be restarted, just because there's an /etc/init.d script named like that.

    – grawity
    yesterday






  • 1





    @PeterJirak As a side note, running services in /etc/init.d is the wrong way on systemd systems. It is just there for backward compatibility to the old System V.

    – rexkogitans
    22 hours ago
















42














You can change the kernel's idea of the hostname on a systemd-based system using the hostnamectl tool. For example:



hostnamectl set-hostname whatever


You can view the system's current idea of the hostname with:



hostnamectl # equivalent to hostnamectl status


Keep in mind that this does not change a running process's idea of the hostname. Such a process would have to check the hostname again in order to be updated, and almost no process does. Thus such a process would need to be restarted. In order for every process to begin using the new hostname, they must be restarted. It's generally easier to just reboot the system than to restart every service individually.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    Do I need to restart networking on my server if I do not wish to reboot it after the rename? I found this: sudo /etc/init.d/network restart Aside from that, restarting networking on my server via that command your point about restarting any running process that needs to know the server's name is valid. Agreed that restarting the host would fix that. That said, there are times that I really want to rename a host, but really do not want to reboot it. Any opinion about sudo /etc/init.d/network restart and its usefulness in getting the new hostname to take effect wout reboot?

    – Peter Jirak
    yesterday







  • 3





    @PeterJirak: Completely useless. If those programs (which need to know the hostname) didn't bother to watch for hostname updates before, then they won't bother now. Telling the system to reconfigure IP addresses on eth0 won't affect that even a little bit.

    – grawity
    yesterday











  • @PeterJirak What do you mean by "getting the new hostname to take effect"? As previously discussed, it takes effect immediately, and any newly started process will be aware of it. I also don't understand why you're asking about restarting the network? What does that have to do with the hostname?

    – Michael Hampton
    yesterday







  • 5





    It's a common misconception that the entirety of "networking" is a userspace service that can be restarted, just because there's an /etc/init.d script named like that.

    – grawity
    yesterday






  • 1





    @PeterJirak As a side note, running services in /etc/init.d is the wrong way on systemd systems. It is just there for backward compatibility to the old System V.

    – rexkogitans
    22 hours ago














42












42








42







You can change the kernel's idea of the hostname on a systemd-based system using the hostnamectl tool. For example:



hostnamectl set-hostname whatever


You can view the system's current idea of the hostname with:



hostnamectl # equivalent to hostnamectl status


Keep in mind that this does not change a running process's idea of the hostname. Such a process would have to check the hostname again in order to be updated, and almost no process does. Thus such a process would need to be restarted. In order for every process to begin using the new hostname, they must be restarted. It's generally easier to just reboot the system than to restart every service individually.






share|improve this answer















You can change the kernel's idea of the hostname on a systemd-based system using the hostnamectl tool. For example:



hostnamectl set-hostname whatever


You can view the system's current idea of the hostname with:



hostnamectl # equivalent to hostnamectl status


Keep in mind that this does not change a running process's idea of the hostname. Such a process would have to check the hostname again in order to be updated, and almost no process does. Thus such a process would need to be restarted. In order for every process to begin using the new hostname, they must be restarted. It's generally easier to just reboot the system than to restart every service individually.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited yesterday

























answered 2 days ago









Michael HamptonMichael Hampton

173k27318643




173k27318643







  • 1





    Do I need to restart networking on my server if I do not wish to reboot it after the rename? I found this: sudo /etc/init.d/network restart Aside from that, restarting networking on my server via that command your point about restarting any running process that needs to know the server's name is valid. Agreed that restarting the host would fix that. That said, there are times that I really want to rename a host, but really do not want to reboot it. Any opinion about sudo /etc/init.d/network restart and its usefulness in getting the new hostname to take effect wout reboot?

    – Peter Jirak
    yesterday







  • 3





    @PeterJirak: Completely useless. If those programs (which need to know the hostname) didn't bother to watch for hostname updates before, then they won't bother now. Telling the system to reconfigure IP addresses on eth0 won't affect that even a little bit.

    – grawity
    yesterday











  • @PeterJirak What do you mean by "getting the new hostname to take effect"? As previously discussed, it takes effect immediately, and any newly started process will be aware of it. I also don't understand why you're asking about restarting the network? What does that have to do with the hostname?

    – Michael Hampton
    yesterday







  • 5





    It's a common misconception that the entirety of "networking" is a userspace service that can be restarted, just because there's an /etc/init.d script named like that.

    – grawity
    yesterday






  • 1





    @PeterJirak As a side note, running services in /etc/init.d is the wrong way on systemd systems. It is just there for backward compatibility to the old System V.

    – rexkogitans
    22 hours ago













  • 1





    Do I need to restart networking on my server if I do not wish to reboot it after the rename? I found this: sudo /etc/init.d/network restart Aside from that, restarting networking on my server via that command your point about restarting any running process that needs to know the server's name is valid. Agreed that restarting the host would fix that. That said, there are times that I really want to rename a host, but really do not want to reboot it. Any opinion about sudo /etc/init.d/network restart and its usefulness in getting the new hostname to take effect wout reboot?

    – Peter Jirak
    yesterday







  • 3





    @PeterJirak: Completely useless. If those programs (which need to know the hostname) didn't bother to watch for hostname updates before, then they won't bother now. Telling the system to reconfigure IP addresses on eth0 won't affect that even a little bit.

    – grawity
    yesterday











  • @PeterJirak What do you mean by "getting the new hostname to take effect"? As previously discussed, it takes effect immediately, and any newly started process will be aware of it. I also don't understand why you're asking about restarting the network? What does that have to do with the hostname?

    – Michael Hampton
    yesterday







  • 5





    It's a common misconception that the entirety of "networking" is a userspace service that can be restarted, just because there's an /etc/init.d script named like that.

    – grawity
    yesterday






  • 1





    @PeterJirak As a side note, running services in /etc/init.d is the wrong way on systemd systems. It is just there for backward compatibility to the old System V.

    – rexkogitans
    22 hours ago








1




1





Do I need to restart networking on my server if I do not wish to reboot it after the rename? I found this: sudo /etc/init.d/network restart Aside from that, restarting networking on my server via that command your point about restarting any running process that needs to know the server's name is valid. Agreed that restarting the host would fix that. That said, there are times that I really want to rename a host, but really do not want to reboot it. Any opinion about sudo /etc/init.d/network restart and its usefulness in getting the new hostname to take effect wout reboot?

– Peter Jirak
yesterday






Do I need to restart networking on my server if I do not wish to reboot it after the rename? I found this: sudo /etc/init.d/network restart Aside from that, restarting networking on my server via that command your point about restarting any running process that needs to know the server's name is valid. Agreed that restarting the host would fix that. That said, there are times that I really want to rename a host, but really do not want to reboot it. Any opinion about sudo /etc/init.d/network restart and its usefulness in getting the new hostname to take effect wout reboot?

– Peter Jirak
yesterday





3




3





@PeterJirak: Completely useless. If those programs (which need to know the hostname) didn't bother to watch for hostname updates before, then they won't bother now. Telling the system to reconfigure IP addresses on eth0 won't affect that even a little bit.

– grawity
yesterday





@PeterJirak: Completely useless. If those programs (which need to know the hostname) didn't bother to watch for hostname updates before, then they won't bother now. Telling the system to reconfigure IP addresses on eth0 won't affect that even a little bit.

– grawity
yesterday













@PeterJirak What do you mean by "getting the new hostname to take effect"? As previously discussed, it takes effect immediately, and any newly started process will be aware of it. I also don't understand why you're asking about restarting the network? What does that have to do with the hostname?

– Michael Hampton
yesterday






@PeterJirak What do you mean by "getting the new hostname to take effect"? As previously discussed, it takes effect immediately, and any newly started process will be aware of it. I also don't understand why you're asking about restarting the network? What does that have to do with the hostname?

– Michael Hampton
yesterday





5




5





It's a common misconception that the entirety of "networking" is a userspace service that can be restarted, just because there's an /etc/init.d script named like that.

– grawity
yesterday





It's a common misconception that the entirety of "networking" is a userspace service that can be restarted, just because there's an /etc/init.d script named like that.

– grawity
yesterday




1




1





@PeterJirak As a side note, running services in /etc/init.d is the wrong way on systemd systems. It is just there for backward compatibility to the old System V.

– rexkogitans
22 hours ago






@PeterJirak As a side note, running services in /etc/init.d is the wrong way on systemd systems. It is just there for backward compatibility to the old System V.

– rexkogitans
22 hours ago














18














You can change the in-kernel hostname using:



hostname NEWNAME


On Linux this is practically equal to either of the following:



sysctl kernel.hostname=NEWNAME

echo NEWNAME > /proc/sys/kernel/hostname


This does not depend on systemd (unlike hostnamectl which requires systemd-hostnamed) or any other non-standard tools, and often (especially in shellscript-init systems) is how the initial hostname was set in the first place.



Most programs and services don't actually use the hostname; the few which do (e.g. Postfix or services using Kerberos) can be restarted one-by-one.



(Some programs cache the hostname until restart, others query it every time they need it. Programs also have the ability to poll(2) /proc/sys/kernel/hostname to receive change notifications, but few do.)






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    Keep in mind that these methods are not persistent and will not survive a reboot.

    – Michael Hampton
    13 hours ago






  • 2





    Fortunately, OP has already covered persistence in their question itself.

    – grawity
    13 hours ago






  • 1





    postfix may have the host name hard coded in one or two places in /etc/postfix/main.cf and /etc/mailname, so those will need to be edited, too.

    – Mark Plotnick
    10 hours ago
















18














You can change the in-kernel hostname using:



hostname NEWNAME


On Linux this is practically equal to either of the following:



sysctl kernel.hostname=NEWNAME

echo NEWNAME > /proc/sys/kernel/hostname


This does not depend on systemd (unlike hostnamectl which requires systemd-hostnamed) or any other non-standard tools, and often (especially in shellscript-init systems) is how the initial hostname was set in the first place.



Most programs and services don't actually use the hostname; the few which do (e.g. Postfix or services using Kerberos) can be restarted one-by-one.



(Some programs cache the hostname until restart, others query it every time they need it. Programs also have the ability to poll(2) /proc/sys/kernel/hostname to receive change notifications, but few do.)






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    Keep in mind that these methods are not persistent and will not survive a reboot.

    – Michael Hampton
    13 hours ago






  • 2





    Fortunately, OP has already covered persistence in their question itself.

    – grawity
    13 hours ago






  • 1





    postfix may have the host name hard coded in one or two places in /etc/postfix/main.cf and /etc/mailname, so those will need to be edited, too.

    – Mark Plotnick
    10 hours ago














18












18








18







You can change the in-kernel hostname using:



hostname NEWNAME


On Linux this is practically equal to either of the following:



sysctl kernel.hostname=NEWNAME

echo NEWNAME > /proc/sys/kernel/hostname


This does not depend on systemd (unlike hostnamectl which requires systemd-hostnamed) or any other non-standard tools, and often (especially in shellscript-init systems) is how the initial hostname was set in the first place.



Most programs and services don't actually use the hostname; the few which do (e.g. Postfix or services using Kerberos) can be restarted one-by-one.



(Some programs cache the hostname until restart, others query it every time they need it. Programs also have the ability to poll(2) /proc/sys/kernel/hostname to receive change notifications, but few do.)






share|improve this answer















You can change the in-kernel hostname using:



hostname NEWNAME


On Linux this is practically equal to either of the following:



sysctl kernel.hostname=NEWNAME

echo NEWNAME > /proc/sys/kernel/hostname


This does not depend on systemd (unlike hostnamectl which requires systemd-hostnamed) or any other non-standard tools, and often (especially in shellscript-init systems) is how the initial hostname was set in the first place.



Most programs and services don't actually use the hostname; the few which do (e.g. Postfix or services using Kerberos) can be restarted one-by-one.



(Some programs cache the hostname until restart, others query it every time they need it. Programs also have the ability to poll(2) /proc/sys/kernel/hostname to receive change notifications, but few do.)







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited yesterday

























answered yesterday









grawitygrawity

6,8432034




6,8432034







  • 1





    Keep in mind that these methods are not persistent and will not survive a reboot.

    – Michael Hampton
    13 hours ago






  • 2





    Fortunately, OP has already covered persistence in their question itself.

    – grawity
    13 hours ago






  • 1





    postfix may have the host name hard coded in one or two places in /etc/postfix/main.cf and /etc/mailname, so those will need to be edited, too.

    – Mark Plotnick
    10 hours ago













  • 1





    Keep in mind that these methods are not persistent and will not survive a reboot.

    – Michael Hampton
    13 hours ago






  • 2





    Fortunately, OP has already covered persistence in their question itself.

    – grawity
    13 hours ago






  • 1





    postfix may have the host name hard coded in one or two places in /etc/postfix/main.cf and /etc/mailname, so those will need to be edited, too.

    – Mark Plotnick
    10 hours ago








1




1





Keep in mind that these methods are not persistent and will not survive a reboot.

– Michael Hampton
13 hours ago





Keep in mind that these methods are not persistent and will not survive a reboot.

– Michael Hampton
13 hours ago




2




2





Fortunately, OP has already covered persistence in their question itself.

– grawity
13 hours ago





Fortunately, OP has already covered persistence in their question itself.

– grawity
13 hours ago




1




1





postfix may have the host name hard coded in one or two places in /etc/postfix/main.cf and /etc/mailname, so those will need to be edited, too.

– Mark Plotnick
10 hours ago






postfix may have the host name hard coded in one or two places in /etc/postfix/main.cf and /etc/mailname, so those will need to be edited, too.

– Mark Plotnick
10 hours ago











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