Annotation of 43BSDTahoe/etc/named/tools/nslookup/nslookup.help, revision 1.1.1.1

1.1       root        1: Commands:      (identifiers are shown in uppercase, [] means optional)
                      2: NAME           - print info about the host/domain NAME using default server
                      3: NAME1 NAME2    - as above, but use NAME2 as server
                      4: help or ?      - print help information
                      5: set OPTION     - set an option
                      6:     all                - print options, current server and host
                      7:     [no]debug  - print debugging information
                      8:     [no]d2     - print exhaustive debugging information
                      9:     [no]defname        - append domain name to each query 
                     10:     [no]recurse        - ask for recursive answer to query
                     11:     [no]vc     - always use a virtual circuit
                     12:     domain=NAME        - set default domain name to NAME
                     13:     root=NAME  - set root server to NAME
                     14:     retry=X    - set number of retries to X
                     15:     timeout=X  - set time-out interval to X
                     16:     querytype=X        - set query type to one of A,CNAME,HINFO,MB,MG,MINFO,MR,MX
                     17:     type=X     - set query type to one of A,CNAME,HINFO,MB,MG,MINFO,MR,MX
                     18: server NAME    - set default server to NAME, using current default server
                     19: lserver NAME   - set default server to NAME, using initial server
                     20: finger [NAME]  - finger the optional NAME
                     21: root           - set current default server to the root
                     22: ls NAME [> FILE]- list the domain NAME, with output optionally going to FILE
                     23: view FILE      - sort an 'ls' output file and view it with more

unix.superglobalmegacorp.com

This archive runs on limited infrastructure. Preserving old code on modern bandwidth. Automated agents are requested to crawl responsibly.