There is a thread going on the outages mailing list talking about this issue.
Seems to be no failures but increased latency to ns1.yahoo.com and
ns3.yahoo.com with trace routes showing USA traffic hitting Asia on v6.
Nolan
> On Jan 27, 2017, at 6:30 PM, Brielle Bruns wrote:
>
> Hello!
>
>
632E636F6D
In RFC 6844 section 7.1 it states
"IANA has assigned Resource Record Type 257 for the CAA Resource Record Type"
and I am seeing:
google.com.54475INTYPE257\# 19
0005697373756573796D616E7465632E636F6D
Nolan Berry
Linux Systems Engineer
DNS Engineerin
System automation and life cycle management is exponentially easier when you
have uniform environments. I am in the process of standardizing global
infrastructure and developing the automation process now.
Nolan
From: NANOG on behalf of valdis.kletni...@vt.edu
;m in an enterprise with some stubborn vendors, and none of
them are even talking about ipv6. It won't help me to move (and it
won't help you to get well if you're here) if my users can't get to
their stuff.
Berry
;m in an enterprise with some stubborn vendors, and none of
them are even talking about ipv6. It won't help me to move (and it
won't help you to get well if you're here) if my users can't get to
their stuff.
Berry
be a much larger pain to do deployments without it, I think.
Berry
be a much larger pain to do deployments without it, I think.
Berry
I'm wondering how many of you who are multihomed also add default
routes pointing to your providers from whom you are receiving full feeds.
If so, why? If not, why not?
Thanks,
Berry
I'm wondering how many of you who are multihomed also add default
routes pointing to your providers from whom you are receiving full feeds.
If so, why? If not, why not?
Thanks,
Berry
We have symmetricom (now microsemi) and are very happy with them, but we use
the roof mounted gps antennas. They will peer with public ntp severs if that
would work for you.
David Hubbard wrote:
>Anyone have recommendations on NTP appliances; i.e. make, model, gps vs
>cell, etc.? Roof/outdoo
> On 11/01/2013 01:08 PM, Gary Buhrmaster wrote:
[...]
>
> Given what we now know about the breadth of the NSA operations, and the
> likelihood that this is still only the tip of the iceberg - would anyone
> still point to NSA guidance on avoiding monitoring with any sort of
> confidence?
>
> The
Get one of these. Lifetime warranty. We need more here because I can
never keep up with mine.
http://www.norriscorp.com/carts/700.html
At 02:27 PM 1/21/2013, you wrote:
Anyone have any good recommendations for an equipment cart to
shuffle IT/Telco equipment around between an office/colo ?
some
high efficiency thing where it normally stays on bypass, but the first
thing it did on the bench was have the inverter/rectifier or bypass
section catch on fire and destroy itself.
My basic rule is that if the first one I buy catches fire, I don't
buy any more.
Berry
s. He could only determine on/off - not
amber/red/green on the equipment we had. I'm wondering if we need a
color vision requirement (or test) as part of our hiring requirements.
Berry Mobley
[...]
Please, unless you really know why you need to do otherwise, just
originate your aggregates.
+1
he all-1's
address. Maybe I can get that changed.
Berry
h.
Thanks for any help you can provide.
Berry Mobley
yet to pen a functional haiku, however.
...
alec
- --
`____
/ Alec Berry \__
| Senior Partner and Director of Technology \
| PGP/GPG key 0xE8E9030F|
| http://alec.reston
s can do something similar.
...
alec
- --
`
/ Alec Berry \__
| Senior Partner and Director of Technology \
| PGP/GPG key 0xE8E9030F|
| http://alec.restontech.com/#PGP |
|---|
| RestonTe
That's why I stick to ARCNET :)
...
alec
- --
`
/ Alec Berry \__
| Senior Partner and Director of Technology \
| PGP/GPG key 0xE8E9030F|
| http://alec.restontech.com/#PGP |
|---|
|
r SMTP server (not on the XBL)
- - SMTP server transports mail to my system
Unless one of those systems mentioned above is a hijacked name server in
Kyiv (and thus on the DROP list), everything will work.
...
alec
- --
`
/ Alec Berry \__
| Senior Partner and D
he DROP list on a free public wireless system I maintain, I was amazed
at how much egress traffic it blocked-- obviously rogue/bad/evil
webservers, IRC hosts, etc.
I wonder if anyone else is using it that way?
...
alec
- --
`____
/ Alec Berry \__
| Senior P
run stunnel to allow incoming
mail submission on port 465 (SMTP + SSL).
> So, for us, having ISPs block port 25 is a problem.
Read: "for us, running a mail server is a problem"
...
alec
- --
`
/ Alec Berry \__
| Senior Partner and Director of Tec
ous behavior
(135-139, 194, 445, 1433, 3306 come to mind) as a way to reduce their
support calls-- but they would have to balance that with the risk of
loosing customers. It's not as much a slippery slope as much as it is a
tightrope act (yes-- I am metaphorically challenged).
...
alec
-
block of 25 is the answer.
If the question is "how can we stop consumer bot armies from sending
spam" it is a pretty good, albeit incomplete, answer.
...
alec
- --
`
/ Alec Berry \__
| Senior Partner and Director of Technology \
| PGP/GPG key 0xE
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