On 21 November 2015 at 02:27, Owen DeLong wrote:
> I mean the router that will deliver the PD to the requesting DHCPv6 client.
>
> If the DHCPv6 server is on-net, then this will be the requesting client.
> Otherwise, it will be the last relay router.
>
>
There is no actual requirement that the re
On Fri, Nov 20, 2015 at 10:35 PM, Jim Burwell wrote:
> 2) What are the most common ways of managing the routing of delegated
> prefixes in the ISPs routing domain? Has a standard method/best
> practice emerged yet? Routing protocols? IPv6 RAs?
>
> One obvious answer would be routing protocols.
On 11/20/15 3:35 PM, Steve Mikulasik wrote:
> Requiring streaming companies not to use UDP is pretty absurd. Surely
> they must be able to identify streaming traffic without needing TCP.
One presumes that they've gotten rather good at looking at HLS or
MPEG-DASH and triggering rate adaption where
y'all might want to look over the work of the ietf homenet working
group for some insight into plans for dhcp-pd, and routing
interactions, in the home and small business, at least.
https://tools.ietf.org/wg/homenet/
some dhcpv6 specific info is spread around using the new hncp protocol.
blatant
Hi
I got a network with two routers and two IP transit providers, each with
the full BGP table. Router A is connected to provider A and router B to
provider B. We use MPLS with a L3VPN with a VRF called "internet".
Everything happens inside that VRF.
Now if I interrupt one of the IP transit circu
Baldur Norddahl writes:
> Hi
>
> I added a default static route 0.0.0.0 to provider A on router A and did
> the same to provider B on router B. This is supposed to be a trick that
> allows the network to move packets before everything is fully converged.
> Traffic might not leave the most optima
Lots of update information on the WA Comcast website. Looks like
they've had daily updates.
http://wacomcast.com/2015/11/21/washington-storm-update-nov-21-2015/
John
On Fri, Nov 20, 2015 at 8:00 AM, Joshua wrote:
> We had hundreds of users in WA with Comcast having many issues yesterday.
> Com
On Sat, Nov 21, 2015 at 8:44 AM, Baldur Norddahl
wrote:
> I got a network with two routers and two IP transit providers, each with
> the full BGP table. Router A is connected to provider A and router B to
> provider B. We use MPLS with a L3VPN with a VRF called "internet".
> Everything happens ins
On 2015-11-21 05:08, Dave Taht wrote:
> y'all might want to look over the work of the ietf homenet working
> group for some insight into plans for dhcp-pd, and routing
> interactions, in the home and small business, at least.
>
> https://tools.ietf.org/wg/homenet/
>
> some dhcpv6 specific info is s
Hey,
This is a complex problems and there are quite a few parts to consider.
Let's assume you want to optimize how fast you choose the right best exit
after a failure. The opposite ( how fast the internet chooses the best entry
point into your network after a failure ) is usually not that easy
http://www.netbotz.ca/rackbotz.htm
Just make sure you put one on both the front and back. Otherwise one could
just open the back and unplug the Ethernet cable.
--
Joe Hamelin, W7COM, Tulalip, WA, +1 (360) 474-7474
On Fri, Nov 20, 2015 at 6:06 PM, Joe Abley wrote:
> On Nov 20, 2015, at 20:55,
On November 20, 2015 at 21:06 jab...@hopcount.ca (Joe Abley) wrote:
> On Nov 20, 2015, at 20:55, Jimmy Hess wrote:
>
> > You're not going to be able to look at a log and see Joe opened it at
> > 2:45AM
> > 12 months ago, and ever since then, the servers are not quite right.
>
> And I
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