A computer hostname represents a unique name that gets assigned to a computer in a network in order to uniquely identify that computer in that specific network. A computer hostname can be set to any name you like, but you should keep in mind the following rules:

  • hostnames can contain letters (from a to z).
  • hostnames can contain digits (from 0 to 9).
  • hostnames can contain only the hyphen character ( – ) as a special character.
  • hostnames can contain the dot special character ( . ).
  • hostnames can contain a combination of all three rules but must start and end with a letter or a number.
  • hostnames letters are case-insensitive.
  • hostnames must contain between 2 and 63 characters long.
  • hostnames should be descriptive (to ease identifying the computer purpose, location, geographical area, etc on the network).

 

In order to display a computer name in CentOS 7 and RHEL 7 systems via console, issue the following command. The -s flag displayed the computer short name (hostname only) and the -f flag displays the computer FQDN in the network (only if the computer is a part of a domain or realm and the FQDN is set).

# hostname
# hostname -s
# hostname -f

 

You can also display a Linux system hostname by inspecting the content of /etc/hostname file using the cat command.

# cat /etc/hostname

 

In order to change or set a CentOS 7 machine hostname, use the hostnamectl command as shown in the below command excerpt.

# hostnamectl set-hostname your-new-hostname

 

In addition to hostname command you can also use hostnamectl command to display a Linux machine hostname.

# hostnamectl

 

In order to apply the new hostname, a system reboot is required, issue one of the below commands in order to reboot a CentOS 7 machine.

# init 6
# systemctl reboot
# shutdown -r

 

A second method to setup a CentOS 7 machine hostname is to manually edit the /etc/hostname file and type your new hostname. Also, a system reboot is necessary in order to apply the new machine name.

# vi /etc/hostname

 

A third method that can be used to change a CentOS 7 machine hostname is by using Linux sysctl interface. However, using this method to change machine name results in setting-up the machine transient hostname.

 

The transient hostname is a special hostname initialized and maintained only by the Linux kernel as an auxiliary machine name in addition to he static hostname and doesn’t survive reboots.

# sysctl kernel.hostname
# sysctl kernel.hostname=new-hostname
# sysctl -w kernel.hostname=new-hostname

 

To display machine transient hostname issue the below commands.

# sysctl kernel.hostname
# hostnamectl

 

Was this answer helpful? 0 Users Found This Useful (0 Votes)