hostnamectlsystemdDeveloperLennartPoetteringlennart@poettering.nethostnamectl1hostnamectlControl the system hostnamehostnamectlOPTIONSCOMMANDDescriptionhostnamectl may be used to
query and change the system hostname and related
settings.This tool distinguishes three different
hostnames: the high-level "pretty" hostname which
might include all kinds of special characters
(e.g. "Lennart's Laptop"), the static hostname which
is used to initialize the kernel hostname at boot
(e.g. "lennarts-laptop"), and the transient hostname
which is a default received from network configuration.
If a static hostname is set, and is valid (something other
than localhost), then the transient hostname is not used.Note that the pretty hostname has little
restrictions on the characters used, while the static
and transient hostnames are limited to the usually
accepted characters of Internet domain names.The static hostname is stored in
/etc/hostname, see
hostname5
for more information. The pretty hostname, chassis
type, and icon name are stored in
/etc/machine-info, see
machine-info5.Use
systemd-firstboot1
to initialize the system host name for mounted (but
not booted) system images.OptionsThe following options are understood:Do not query the user
for authentication for privileged
operations.If
status is used (or
no explicit command is given) and one
of those fields is given,
hostnamectl will
print out just this selected
hostname.If used with
set-hostname, only
the selected hostname(s) will be
updated. When more than one of those
options is used, all the specified
hostnames will be updated.
The following commands are understood:statusShow current system
hostname and related
information.set-hostname NAMESet the system
hostname to
NAME. By
default, this will alter the pretty,
the static, and the transient hostname
alike; however, if one or more of
,
,
are used,
only the selected hostnames are
changed. If the pretty hostname is
being set, and static or transient are
being set as well, the specified
hostname will be simplified in regards
to the character set used before the
latter are updated. This is done by
replacing spaces with
- and removing
special characters. This ensures that
the pretty and the static hostname are
always closely related while still
following the validity rules of the
specific name. This simplification of
the hostname string is not done if
only the transient and/or static host
names are set, and the pretty host
name is left untouched.Pass the empty string
as the hostname to
reset the selected hostnames to their
default (usually
localhost).set-icon-name NAMESet the system icon
name to
NAME. The
icon name is used by some graphical
applications to visualize this host.
The icon name should follow the Icon
Naming Specification.Pass an empty string to reset
the icon name to the default value,
which is determined from chassis type
(see below) and possibly other
parameters.set-chassis TYPESet the chassis type
to TYPE.
The chassis type is used by some
graphical applications to visualize
the host or alter user interaction.
Currently, the following chassis types
are defined:
desktop,
laptop,
server,
tablet,
handset,
watch, as well as
the special chassis types
vm and
container for
virtualized systems that lack an
immediate physical chassis.Pass an empty string to reset
the chassis type to the default value
which is determined from the firmware
and possibly other parameters.Exit statusOn success, 0 is returned, a non-zero failure
code otherwise.See Alsosystemd1,
hostname1,
hostname5,
machine-info5,
systemctl1,
systemd-hostnamed.service8,
systemd-firstboot1