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 Posted by John Bell on 12/30/06 09:37 
Hi Mark 
 
"Mark Delaney" <drsparc@gmail.com> wrote in message  
news:1167431063.785847.116630@48g2000cwx.googlegroups.com... 
> Hey, 
> 
> It isn't the database server name that is in question.  The hostname of 
> the machine where the client is running is the issue.  If I try and 
> make a JDBC connection from a machine where the hostname doesn't match 
> what the DB server's DNS lists it as, then the connection is rejected. 
> This didn't happen with the 2003 JDBC driver, so it looks like a new 
> security feature.  But I would like to disable it. 
> 
> 
>   - Mark 
 
I am not sure why this would cause a problem when connecting to the server,  
there must be some conversation being carried out! I would expect it to  
cause problems for other applications as well, therefore you may want to  
resolve the issue for those. I assume you can't change the hosts file on the  
server? Your post in microsoft.public.sqlserver.jdbcdriver has had no  
replies yet! 
 
 
John
 
  
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