Difference between revisions of "ifconfig"
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m (Woozle moved page ifconfig (Linux command) to ifconfig without leaving a redirect: consolidating this with the other one that's mainly the manpage) |
(layout updates; link to subpage) |
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− | == | + | ==About== |
− | + | [[ifconfig]] is the [[Linux]] equivalent to the [[Windows (Microsoft)|Windows]] command [[ipconfig]], although unlike ipconfig it does not return information about [[DNS]] settings. | |
− | [[ | + | {{seed}} |
+ | ==Inlinks== | ||
+ | * [[/manpage]]: old transcription of the ifconfig [[manpage]] | ||
==Reference== | ==Reference== | ||
− | * {{wikipedia | + | * {{wikipedia}} |
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
Commands related to [[DHCP]], which provides the [[DNS]] settings (not shown by ifconfig) at the same time as it sets the adapter's [[IP address]] (which is shown by ifconfig): | Commands related to [[DHCP]], which provides the [[DNS]] settings (not shown by ifconfig) at the same time as it sets the adapter's [[IP address]] (which is shown by ifconfig): | ||
* {{Linuxcmd|dhcpcd}}: the DHCP [[client (computing)|client]] [[daemon]] | * {{Linuxcmd|dhcpcd}}: the DHCP [[client (computing)|client]] [[daemon]] |
Revision as of 02:09, 14 December 2015
About
ifconfig is the Linux equivalent to the Windows command ipconfig, although unlike ipconfig it does not return information about DNS settings.
This page is a seed article. You can help HTYP water it: make a request to expand a given page and/or donate to help give us more writing-hours!
|
Inlinks
Reference
Notes
Commands related to DHCP, which provides the DNS settings (not shown by ifconfig) at the same time as it sets the adapter's IP address (which is shown by ifconfig):