Hello to those of you I haven't talked in a while, and last
two years conference attendees. (Sorry if you get two copies of
this, it means you've either got two ids in my addressbook or
my perl hash script-foo is not leet enough. :-)
This is a quick note to remind you that the deadline for reduc
I would heartily endorse having the out of the box FreeBSD install be tuned
better...
Sysadmin can't be knocked for not doing the tuning as running an out of
the box config is what a vast majority of users do, imho, so their performance
tests and the poor results from FreeBSD are perfectly vali
ll performance of the
system. Our conclusions are that BPF architecture for Windows performs well,
that the dynamic buffer improves effectively the overall performances and that,
among all the Windows flavors, Windows 2000 is the best platform for an high
performance network analyzer.
--
D
On Tue, 07 Nov 2000, Kris Kennaway wrote:
>
> On Tue, Nov 07, 2000 at 01:56:21PM +0100, Konrad Heuer wrote:
>
> > After patching and installing, tcpdump can't be used anymore since it puts
> > very heavy load onto the network via xl0 and AppleTalk broadcast messages
> > (one message each 0.2 ms)
managed DoS through automated replies and thereby guarantee that your
supply of highly repetitive robot messages is not put in jeopardy.
We now return you to your regularly scheduled robots...
--
Dragos Ruiu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> dursec.com ltd. / kyx.net - we're from the future
gpg
On Tue, 10 Oct 2000, Dragos Ruiu wrote:
> Is there anyway I can retrieve the files? Unfortunately
> > I cannot unmount the device because it hosts critical applications.
> Check out the unrm/lazarus tools in Dan Farmer's and Wietse Venema's The
> Coro
On Tue, 10 Oct 2000, Adam Klinkel wrote:
> I'm sorry for bothering. I created a static link to a users directory; ln
> -s /usr/home/user user in my directory to do some work with some of his
> files. Once I had completed the work, I typed rm -r user/ .
> You can see my situation already I'm s
On Sun, 10 Sep 2000, Stephen Hocking wrote:
> >
> > > Hi, I'd just like to say that I dont think non cardbus cards are capable
> > > of doing more than 10bt speeds even if it talks 100bt. I have not met one
> > > that did and I assume it is a limit of the pcmcia design. Just warning
> > > you
spam: GPS descrambled
Date: Wed, 3 May 2000 10:55:47 -0700
From: Dragos Ruiu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
(Ok, I'm a network guy, why should I give a flying donut
about GPS descrambling? Well one of the big blocks to
using GPS receivers to synchronizing clocks on sniffers
for high speed networks was th
I would recommend that everyone who received this forward it back to Mr. Pio
at [EMAIL PROTECTED] to make the point that this is unacceptable behaviour.
Just once each should suffice, and not contravene any usage policies :-).
I did... Call it distributed spam negative reinforcement. :-) :-) :
On Thu, 27 Apr 2000, Dragos Ruiu wrote:
> On Thu, 27 Apr 2000, Kazutaka YOKOTA wrote:
> > >I have a freebsd system(3.4S) on a KVM and every time the monitored
> > >system is switched, the mouse driver gets fuxored, and when you switch
> > >back to the syste
On Thu, 27 Apr 2000, Kazutaka YOKOTA wrote:
> >I have a freebsd system(3.4S) on a KVM and every time the monitored
> >system is switched, the mouse driver gets fuxored, and when you switch
> >back to the system the driver starts outputting oodles of the following
> >messages to syslog every ti
I'll try asking here now
I have a freebsd system(3.4S) on a KVM and every time the monitored
system is switched, the mouse driver gets fuxored, and when you switch
back to the system the driver starts outputting oodles of the following
messages to syslog every time the mouse is moved:
Ap
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