Network Information Service

The Network Information Service or NIS is Sun Microsystems' "Yellow Pages" (YP) client-server directory service protocol for distributing system configuration data such as user and host names between computers on a computer network. NIS/YP is used for keeping a central directory of users, hostnames and most other useful things in a computer network. For example, in a common UNIX environment, the list of users (for authentication) is placed in /etc/passwd. Using NIS adds another "global" user list which is used for authenticating users on any host. Sun licenses this technology to virtually all other Unix vendors. As the name "Yellow Pages" is a registered trademark in the United Kingdom of British Telecom PLC for their (paper) commercial telephone directory, Sun changed the name of their system to NIS, though all the commands and functions still start with "yp". In modern environment, directory services like Lightweight Directory Access Protocol and Kerberos have come to replace NIS at many sites and are mostly considered to be more modern and secure than NIS.

NIS commands:

  • ypcat
  • ypmatch
  • ypwhich
  • ypclnt

See Also

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
glycome
church stretton
regions of the philippines
south shropshire
vampire tap
commutator (electric)
slurry wall
bentonite
grumman aircraft engineering corporation
jean paul mousseau
lene lovich
spitting image
tarski's circle squaring problem
uss new york (lpd 21)
osmanli
running mate
sars and accusations of racial discrimination
list of presidents of argentina
o'reilly media
google hacks
tara calishain
yp
yellow pages (computing)
nis
stockholm school
french consulate
history of northern ireland
gothenburg school of economics and commercial law
the relapse
lund school of economics and management
economic history of britain
french colonial empire
ample
schwalm eder
the market for lemons
ali ahmad jalali
thomas arnold
borken
yusuf nooristani
mentor graphics
eda
anwar ul haq ahadi
a1 road
northrop corporation