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These days server naming is a bit of a lost art. Most large organizations don't allow for fanciful names and name their servers with jumbles of digits and letters. In the olden days just about every system administrator came up with a unique naming scheme, well, sometimes unique - many just settled for Star Trek characters.

To this day my favorite server name is Qantas - a Unix server that Joel Spolsky has or used to have. Why Qantas? You'd have to ask Rainman.

So my question is this - what is the coolest server name or naming convention that you encountered? Let the geekfest begin. This question is marked "community wiki", so I am not getting any "rep" from it.

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Close this question please, it has nothing to do with programming. – zamfir Nov 5 at 4:32
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Yeah, I think this went on long enough. – deadprogrammer Feb 5 at 22:15
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closed as "not programming related" by le dorfier, Martin, Adam Davis, Adam Bellaire, Juan Manuel Feb 26 at 21:37

450 Answers

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One of my inventions, of which I was the most proud, was a server naming scheme I came up with at a previous employer. It was called the RFB scheme. We had a tradition in place of using rather tasteless humour for determining systemic nomenclatures. Previously, we'd employed a convention a friend of mine had suggested, using euphemisms for vomiting ( yak, ralph, hurl, chunder etc. ) but this had leaked up towards management who freaked that it might offend potential customers if the hostnames were somehow exposed, via mail headers or some such, and firmly suggested we change it to something tamer.

So we needed something innocuous, memorable, preferably with a payload of appropriately tasteless humour somehow opaque to everyone bar the tech ops. I remembered reading a list years previously, either on a BBS or USENET which I'd found morbidly amusing. Supposedly representative of a survey taken from Surgery magazine, of various objects removed from patients in emergency rooms, called the Rectal Foreign Bodies list. It was perfect, even coming with it's own snazzy sounding cryptic Three Letter Acronym. The RFB cluster was born.

This scheme was successfully deployed for a few years, I think without the management types ever cottoning on to just why these innocent, random sounding computer names used to elicit such childish smirking and nodding between members of their technical staff.

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"Hey man, what's the name of the new server?" "toothbrush" "Awwww, sick!" – vitule Nov 5 at 18:12
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I just looked that up. I read "frozen pigs tail" and decided that's enough education for me for the day. Priceless. – Steve B. Dec 29 at 22:54
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Elements of the periodic table. We also use the element number in the IP address, so

Hydrogen = 192.168.0.1

Helium = 192.168.0.2

etc.

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This could be confusing. "Uranium isn't secure. Call the feds!" "Xenon is an Itanium." "Lithium is on battery power." "Yesterday was patch day. Is Technetium stable?" "Don't put the code on Silicon, it's not complete yet, and you'll waste chips!" – Jeffrey L Whitledge Nov 7 at 16:51
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"We connected Hydrogen and Oxygen, but they blow up!" – Myrrdyn Nov 9 at 15:40
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The funniest server name story I have is from when I worked at the Kennedy Space Center. On our particular project, our main server was named snowwhite, and the 7 client workstations were named after the Seven Dwarves. The kicker is, one day one of our engineers ran into a Disney Imagineer who worked at Walt Disney World, and they started talking about server names. The Disney Imagineer said "that's funny, we have a group of servers named columbia, challenger, atlantis, and discovery."

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Actually it would not be ironic if one of them crashed. Servers crash and if one that was named after a shace shuttle crashed it would be quite the opposite of ironic - just happenstance. – paul.richardson Nov 8 at 23:55
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That is too funny! It was like that time I named my servers after the Playmates of the month and bumped into an IT guy at Playboy.com well except for the part where his servers were named after anything to do with my industry. :) Karan...that was a tasteless comment. – Mike Brown Nov 10 at 14:22
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Use Google Sets to expand a list of a few items, into a list with many items. For example let's suppose you want a set (or list) of Star Wars characters, but can only think of a few. Enter a the ones you can think of, and Google sets will return a whole list of others you can use for server names.

Great way to get a list for server names!

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I thought of two different naming schemes this week for a situation where there are redundant servers with one at a primary datacentre and its doppleganger at a secondary datacentre. Each server would have a name that is related to its match.

The first idea was related car models:

Taurus / Sable

Cavalier / Sunfire

The problem there was deciding which was primary and which was secondary. A better (and more fun) solution was superheros and their secret identities:

Hulk / Banner

Spidey / Parker

Superman / Kent

Batman / Wayne

Robin / Grayson

Batgirl / Gordon

Tarzan / Greystoke

Robinhood / Loxley

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Unix boxes named after Greek gods (Apollo, Zeus, etc.)

Windows machines named after Muppets (Fozzy, Beaker, etc.)

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I like your thinking :) – Brabster Nov 4 at 20:09
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very appropriate, ahahaha – Anders Nov 5 at 21:09
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It may be worth referring to RFC 1178- "Choosing a name for your computer":

Naming groups of machines in a common way is very popular, and enhances communality while displaying depth of knowledge as well as imagination. A simple example is to use colors, such as "red" and "blue". Personality can be injected by choices such as "aqua" and "crimson". Certain sets are finite, such as the seven dwarfs. When you order your first seven computers, keep in mind that you will probably get more next year. Colors will never run out. Some more suggestions are: mythical places (e.g., Midgard, Styx, Paradise), mythical people (e.g., Procne, Tereus, Zeus), killers (e.g., Cain, Burr, Boleyn), babies (e.g., colt, puppy, tadpole, elver), collectives (e.g., passel, plague, bevy, covey), elements (e.g., helium, argon, zinc), flowers (e.g., tulip, peony, lilac, arbutus). Get the idea?
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We use Simpson names.

I try to match the name based upon what the server does or what it is made out of.

For instance, some health related servers are called DRNICK and DRHIBBERT.

We have a firewall... WIGGUM

Servers that do not behave properly... JIMBO and NELSON

I have one in a Spanish Speaking office... BUMBLEBEEMAN

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I use Shakespeare characters who eventually die.

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Use MOUNTAINS!

Why?

  • There's a TONNE of them.
  • You'll never run out of names.
  • They're easy to Type:
  • FUJI, MAYON, EVEREST, K2
  • Volcanoes are used for volatile servers
  • Long mountain names like KILIMANJARO are servers that you don't want people to log onto
  • Different Mountain RAnges can serve as Clusters or a SAN. (The Rockies, Andes, Alps)
  • It's always the user's fault when they crash into a mountain
    • Mountains don't crash
  • However, sometimes they explode (VESUVIUS)
  • You can rank them by Height and represent many of them pictorially in Network diagrams. (The Matterhorn, Mt. Fuji)
  • Mountains are great Security fortresses (Why do you think China wants to keep Tibet... it's a plateau beside India!)
  • They are visible from outer space.
  • They can be classified in many different ways.
  • They can be Local (Intranet Servers) or in other countries/continents (WANs)
  • They are common to ALL people in all countries.
  • They can be named after people's local hometown mountains. (When I was a kid I climbed to the peak of x mountain)

MOUNTAINS!!!


edit:

VMWare (and other Virtual Machines) can be named after "Undersea Volcanoes" like Loihi, They exist, but you can't see them without special equipment.

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MOUNTAINS!!! (Sorry I was getting into the spirit of things) – Ali Parr Feb 3 at 10:20
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I've used the seven deadly sins before

  • lust
  • gluttony
  • greed
  • sloth
  • wrath
  • envy
  • pride

When I ran out, I continued on with the seven virtues

  • prudence
  • justice
  • temperance
  • courage
  • faith
  • hope
  • charity
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Why, the poster asked for coolest, so here goes:

  • air-conditioned
  • algid
  • arctic
  • biting
  • chill
  • chilled
  • chilling
  • chilly
  • coldish
  • frigid
  • frore
  • frosty
  • gelid
  • hawkish
  • nipping
  • refreshing
  • refrigerated
  • shivery
  • snappy
  • wintry
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I once worked at a place where we had a server called "YOURMOM".

The jokes were endless:

"I just turned on YOURMOM"

lots of jokes about forking and backing up as well.

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hee hee. We had one called Natasha for Natasha Henstridge. "Just hop onto Natasha and get file x" – asp316 Feb 11 at 18:40
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"Hey yourmom just went down on me again!" – Ben Daniel Feb 27 at 7:18
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The most common name for a computer used to be elvis. This is because there was a tool which checked whether a computer was on-line, and when it was, it'd say "COMPUTERNAME is alive."

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When I worked at Bellcore, the network servers all had names that matched *day. Sunday-Saturday were obvious. When they needed more servers, they added Payday, Faraday, and Oneaday.

One group used something akin to rejected names for the seven dwarfs (Grubby, Sleazy, Gropey...)

When they got a few brand spanking new NeXT boxes, they were named after polymers since there were like nothing else (Nylon, Rayon, Orlon, Dacron, Polyester).

There were some cartoon character names used for Sun workstations. This unfortunately led to some awkward conversations outside of work:

BC Worker: My Sun died this week.

Non-tech person: Oh! I'm so very sorry!

BC Worker: It's OK, I'm going to get another one and name him Bullwinkle.

Non-tech person: !!!

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lol, love the convo – Ben Daniel Feb 27 at 7:17
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I like systems that have a natural number-to-naming relationship, like the periodic table. Lots of cool names, and you can figure out IP addresses even when DNS is down (if you remember your chemistry).

There are other lists that work this way (50 states, US presidents, etc.), but the names aren't as cool.

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We have a plan to change our build server to be "Bob the builder".

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All of our servers follow a pattern of outmoded women's names.

  • Thelma
  • Ethel
  • Maude
  • Myrtle
  • Agnes

Additional suggestions? I'd love to hear them.

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All your bases are belong to my grandmother! – Ali A Nov 4 at 17:56
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For a time, I used names of girls in famous songs:

  • Layla
  • Roxanne
  • Jenny
  • Amanda
  • Maggie Mae
  • Allison
  • Rhonda
  • Jessie
  • Ruby
  • Lucy
  • Billy Jean (not my server)
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My university compsci lab had three unix boxes named Godel, Escher, & Bach.

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I name my servers after the Muppets.

  • Fozzie
  • Kermit
  • Gonzo
  • Statler
  • Waldorf
  • Piggy
  • Rawlf
  • Rizzo
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The AI entities from Deus Ex: Daedalus, Icarus, Helios, and Morpheus.

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a, b, c, d, ...

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at one job we had a major client who was a liquor distributor, and one of the managers was a drinker who would have a scotch or three every day at 5. So I named his workstation 'scotch'. As time went on we ended up with

  • vodka
  • scotch
  • whisky
  • rhum
  • tequila
  • bourbon
  • vermouth
  • brandy
  • cognac

It was a boozy time.

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I use George Carlin's naughty words.

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We name everything after transformers. For the most part this is good except that we have at least 4 machines which start with 'sky'. It can be confusing.

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Vogon

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Now that's poetic! :) – Chris Noe Nov 7 at 17:32
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Being in Scotland one company I used to work for used to use Lochs for unix servers and rivers for Windows servers. They had a list of all such in the country which was of a pretty usable length and all worked fine until one day I dropped in a new server and got told it would be called

THE

Which apparently is a sea loch in Shetland. The computer manager in charge was particularly aspergerish and couldn't see what was wrong with it - although after a month of referring to the The server he was finally convinced that maybe it wasn't such a good idea.

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You can use the Phonetic alphabet. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NATO_phonetic_alphabet

That way you can say "Charlie is down" or "Alpha has some problems with its disk"

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I name all my computers after fictional (and occasionally non-fictional) computers. My main server is called "hal", while my laptop is "lal". I have a gateway computer named "rosie", an old desktop named "marvin", etc. I used to have a laptop named "turing", but not enough people would get the joke. :-)

For the ultimate in weird puns, my sister named her laptop "majel".

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