ems, which also
allows you to consolidate the stdout reporting from each system
- Source: https://github.com/wg/wrk
--
-G
On 2024-02-23 17:33, Brandon Martin wrote:
Before I go to the trouble of making one myself, does anybody happen to
know of a pre-canned program to generate realistic an
count executive and
their internal WAF team to expedite the removal of the addresses.
-G
On 2024-03-21 18:44, Aaron Wendel wrote:
Yes.
our network is a mix of content and eyeballs and they listed the whole
thing. This has prevented the local school district from using their
text to s
What I have done is leverage the production data center redundancy to
provide connectivity services to any nearby offices in the same region,
basically using our colo as the office ISP for internet connectivity but as
far as doing vpls services and the like, it has been so far cheaper to
contract t
On Mar 15, 2013 11:37 AM, "Christopher Morrow"
wrote:
>
> On Fri, Mar 15, 2013 at 11:32 AM, Joshua Goldbard wrote:
> > God I want one of those PA firewalls just to play with in the lab. I
can't
> > justify the expense, but as far as firewalls go they're gorgeous. From
the
> > chassis to the UI, P
Hey guys,
I have a need for your candid opinion. I am searching for an enterprise
sized application (commercial or otherwise) that can accomplish diversified
network access from the inside. This is roughly the situation:
A diversified very large (multinational) enterprise, consisting of a
multit
Hi guys,
What would you recommend as a state-of-the-art web-based incident
registration/warning tool for an enterprise size (multiple diverse wans)
net?
Thx
Jack
Jack Ryan
National Railway Org.
nso...@gmail.com
On Thu, 3 Jun 2021, Mark Tinka wrote:
There's been a bit of glass in Nairobi for some time now :-). But sure, the
more, the merrier.
https://afterfiber.nsrc.org/
Steve
On 1/28/20 4:22 PM, Paul Nash wrote:
Carrying on with the “first Internet connection” thread:
I forget how I found out about Usenet and UUCP email (lost in the mosts of
time). I ran a store and forward dial-up link from South Africa to DDSW1 in
Chicago (Hi Karl! Thanks!). I cobbled togeth
With talk of there being an involuntary statewide (WA) and then national
quarantines (house arrest) for multiple weeks, has anyone put thought into the
impacts of this on your networks if/when this comes to fruition?
We're already pushing the limits with telecommuters / those that are WFH, but
Hello,
I have a problem with cloud services at Lightshot / app.prntscr.com.
Always return the CAPTCHA(Cloudflare - One more step) when I try to open
the app.prntscr.com.
Does anyone have any technical contact?
best regards,
Jacques G. Busnardo
The last time I worked with vMX was several years ago. The image was
outdated to the point of having to fire up an older version of VMWare to
export the two VMs so I could import them back into 6. The
documentation barely existed. I had to figure out which vmware adapters
corresponded to whi
nline presence. Any
tips on getting VPN user data (or best practices in this type of
situation) would be greatly appreciated.
Best,
Andrew Watters
--
Andrew G. Watters
Rællic Systems
and...@raellic.com
+1 (415) 261-8527
https://www.raellic.com
Hi folks,
At $day_job, I have a team of engineers who are oncall for critical
services in the United Kingdom. For $reasons, the national power grid is
announcing the possibility of rolling power cuts over the coming months.
Right now it's "unlikely", but possible. If cuts do happen, it'll be 3
On 4/25/23 3:55 PM, Lyndon Nerenberg (VE7TFX/VE6BBM) wrote:
It has been a couple of decades since I've done any BGP in anger,
but it looks like I will be jumping into the deep end again, soon,
and I desperately need to get up to speed again.
There seem to be a lot of good guides out there from
If you are considering pfSense, I would urge you to look at OPNsense
instead. The pfSense code is horrible!
On 5/5/16 11:11 AM, amuse wrote:
What PFSense currently lacks in brand name recognition, they can make up
with by the fact that they offer paid support at very affordable levels.
I'd go
I would love to hear Amazon's response to this very question!
On 8/23/16 4:37 PM, Mark Andrews wrote:
I'm curious. What are you trying to achieve by blocking EDNS version
negotiation? Is it really too hard to return BADVERS to a EDNS
query with version != 0 along with the version of EDNS you
l functionality, behavior and
so on.
Regards,
Israel G. Lugo
On 10/20/2016 07:59 PM, Ken Chase wrote:
> re more general 'network utilities' and scripts:
>
> http://sizone.org/m/hacks/cidrmath.pl
>
> adds and removes subnets from networks giving list of remaining/aggreg
On Thu, 26 Apr 2018, Lars Prehn wrote:
However, I'm really interested in getting an accurate snapshot of the current
Internet's AS-level topology. The topology-related data ThousandEyes collects
would fit my needs perfectly. If anyone may be able to provide similar data
for academic research p
On 5/30/18 1:44 PM, Mark Tinka wrote:
Backhaul isn't a major issue - pretty much, every MNO in Africa has
their own Metro and national fibre backbone; and in some cases, even
their own submarine backbone.
This map is still a work in progress, but it's clear that roll-out of
fiber across the
The pessimistic (and likely most realistic) take is that enabling
potential customers to do research like that is seen as a missed
opportunity for a sales contact.
-- Original Message --
From "Mike Hammett"
To "NANOG"
Date 10/26/2023 12:17:22
Subject Pulling of Network Maps
Has an
ation", and "this
autodetects your cables, configures your switches and sends a robot to
connect everything".
Thank you and best regards,
Israel G. Lugo
On 02/24/2017 03:58 AM, Hugo Slabbert wrote:
> None of these necessarily get to your ideal state, but at least get
> you going wrt discovery for semi-dynamic documentation.
Thank you for the suggestions.
I've used Netdisco in the past, older 1.x version. It was nice and
useful. I've gone ahead an
That actually seems nice!
I tried a quick demo of the Pro version and it has a distinct DCIM-like
feel. Still not sure it can place things e.g. on a floor plant but
perhaps there's a way to integrate with some API.
The community version does lack multiple useful features, though. I'll
have to try
On 02/24/2017 03:52 AM, Mel Beckman wrote:
> This tool is not cheap, but I believe it can handle all the physical plant
> inventory and provisioning objectives you listed:
>
> http://synchronoss.com/wp-content/uploads/spatialNET.pdf
>
Judging from the description on the PDF, that does seem to be
GTGIIRO
>
> Despite the content is in Brazilian Portuguese, it may work well to
> use Google Translator to read the overview.
>
> The software developed was funded by the Brazilian NREN. The software
> is maintained by a team of research and development.
>
> Alex
>
&g
Did you try on their support page
<https://gsuite.google.com/intl/en_ie/support/#connect>?
On Mon, Mar 20, 2017 at 7:54 PM, Jason Canady wrote:
> Is anyone here from Google's G Suite or email department? I recently
> acquired a brand who's domain is being blocked by
Once upon a time, I worked on the SYS/NET OPS time of a United Online
subsidiary. Spent a lot of time in the data centers and worked on
occasion with other OPS folks from different business units. They would
joke about the complaints that would come in, they do read the emails -
but you have to
rding this. Sorry if this is not the
right channel too.
--
Carlos G Mendioroz
me of the prefixes?
--
Carlos G Mendioroz
On Jan 4, 2011, at 9:04 AM, Takashi Tome wrote:
[snip]
> Put in other words, software knowledge is not enough, you must have a deep
> understanding of that business and the history of the system itself...
[snip]
This is the case 100% of the time, regardless of how many "top"
developers/coders t
I can't tell you the kind of servers, but I can say that I was
recently in Prineville, OR, where FB is building a data center (and a
second data center). I was used to the ol data centers - you know,
where there's raised floors, cabinets, cool air, a guard and a few
guys around with some screens?
Looks like walmart.com is down as well >.>
http://www.downforeveryoneorjustme.com/www.walmart.com
On 12/26/12 1:50 PM, Scott Howard wrote:
> But only over HTTP. Working fine over HTTPS for me.
>
> Scott
>
>
>
> On Wed, Dec 26, 2012 at 1:46 PM, Joshua Goldbard wrote:
>
>> Http://www.downf
ni lar has requested to add someone, and so has kanchana, so i think our
group reservation is full
will try to check this morning to confirm
On Wed, 16 Jan 2013, Matthew Petach wrote:
I'll bet Hitler would have used his real name on the whois entries.
There. Now I think we're done.
Matt
On
I've dealt with moody ILO's in the past. Presuming (1) they're all on
the latest firmware (2) there isn't anything fishy/tell-tale in the logs
and (3) that you aren't afraid of a CLI, my advice would be to look into
using python-hpilo, which provides a command line interface to the ILO
API for A-Z
I vote pfSense.. don't skimp on the NIC's when you build one out (Intel
ftw).
My $0.02..
Gino
On 2/12/13 1:56 PM, Michael Thomas wrote:
>
> O oracle of nanog: unlike things like rogue processes eating tons of CPU,
> it seems to me that network monitoring is essentially a black art for the
> ave
P, via AS6453 (Globe) -> AS1299 (Telia) works fine.
Regards,
Israel G. Lugo
.
Regards,
Israel G. Lugo
On 05/02/2013 07:08 PM, Grant Ridder wrote:
> Looks like ge-2-5.br1-knams.wikimedia.org (130.244.6.250) is filtering you
> somehow.
>
> Grant
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On May 2, 2013, at 9:01 AM, "Israel G. Lugo" wrote:
>
>&
Looking at that path as well. Thanks Chris.
Parent company of the target business unit is a fortune 100.
Sent from my HTC on the Now Network from Sprint!
- Reply message -
From: "Chris"
Date: Wed, Dec 7, 2011 9:02 am
Subject: [OT] Domain Name broker
To:
Auction it on Sedo because th
For those with Colo space in Melbourne FL. Please reply to me offlist; looking
to deploy a POP there.
Thanks.
Sent from my HTC on the Now Network from Sprint!
We use rapidssl. Seems to be ok across the board. No reports otherwise.
Sent from my HTC on the Now Network from Sprint!
- Reply message -
From: "Michael Carey"
Date: Fri, Jan 6, 2012 8:15 am
Subject: SSL Certificates
To:
Looking for a recommendation on who to buy affordable and reput
Likewise, working here.
$ dig +trace www.facebook.com
; <<>> DiG 9.7.0-P1 <<>> +trace www.facebook.com
;; global options: +cmd
. 240259 IN NS b.root-servers.net.
. 240259 IN NS g.root-servers.net.
. 240259 IN
I have to respond with the sentiments of Robert: "large" is a very relative
term. Also, are we talking about origination or termination here? How many
minutes a day of each? What's your ACD? What are your top destinations? If
it's bursty like a call center how many concurrent calls?
You can'
, so default traceroute may not be indicative.
To better replicate the problem, you can tell traceroute to send TCP
SYNs to the specific port you're trying to reach (443). Run this as root
(it needs raw sockets):
# traceroute -M tcp -p 443 dropbox.com
Regards,
Israel G. Lugo
to start an argument on
whether A is better than B, nor do I believe that to be the site's
purpose. Rather, I would like to divulge and hopefully incite some
productive discussion.
Regards,
Israel G. Lugo
I was actually not aware of this. I've been told that systemd also
includes fsck's functionality (or is planning to?). That just seems
absurd to me.
I didn't really have a strong opinion on either side of this yet. Seeing
the replies from other people here, though, and reading some more about
it,
On 10/21/2014 11:55 PM, Jay Ashworth wrote:
> - Original Message -
>> From: "Capi"
Whoops, used the wrong alias to reply.
>> Not *every single* distribution...
> I had meant to put an asterisk on that.
My remark was meant to be tongue-in-cheek :)
> Ok, but how does it handle providi
On 10/21/2014 11:59 PM, Tom Hill wrote:
> On 21/10/14 23:55, Jay Ashworth wrote:
>> Ok, but how does it handle providing initscripts? I gather any upstreams
>> which used to provide them aren't anymore...
> It's Gentoo: "You should write your own" is the most likely answer.
Actually, not at all;
On 22-10-2014 17:12, Miles Fidelman wrote:
> Seems to me, this has been a very rational discussion, confined to one
> very identifiable thread, containing what at least this reader finds
> very useful (operational impacts of systemd in server-side
> environments, and what alternatives people are lo
On 22-10-2014 17:30, Jeffrey Ollie wrote:
> Hardly. The discussion so far has been weighted very heavily on the
> side of Dana Carvey's "Grumpy Old Man"-style whining. "That's the way
> it was and we liked it!". The people that like systemd (like myself)
> have wisely learned that the people that h
On 10/23/2014 12:05 AM, Jeffrey Ollie wrote:
> systemd is a tool designed to get the system to a state where "real
> work" can be done. NTP servers, DHCP clients, consoles, aren't the
> real work of a system, or at least I hope not, because that would be
> boring to me.
That idea sounds interes
Old days... :)
http://www.snotr.com/video/14338/In_Honor_Of_The_Internet_Turning_45_Today__Here_Is_Its_First_Router
My CF-19 does the trick quite nicely
On 11/10/14 12:39 PM, Max Clark wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> DB9 ports seem to be a nearly extinct feature on laptops. Any
> suggestions on a cheap laptop for use in field support (with an onboard
> DB9)?
>
> Thanks,
> Max
>
>
I know it’s a long shot on this list, but if you know of anyone who can provide
these services or even just a good place like NANOG for that part of the world
please contact me off list.
Hello,
Was down in Portugal until just now, and from downforeveryoneorjustme.com.
Just tried and it seems to be working again, though.
On 09/28/2015 09:39 PM, Raymond Dijkxhoorn wrote:
> Hai Marco,
>
> Same in NL so most likely bigger then Italy alone.
>
> Thanks,
> Raymond Dijkxhoorn, Proloc
think IPv6 should've been at least 192 bits long.
Israel G. Lugo
Hey!
New message, please read <http://lilouconnect.com/with.php?ktxb>
Daryl G. Jurbala
ng to catch a bug from some weird packets thrown
at it.
Thank you for reading. Regards,
Israel G. Lugo
+1 for BIRD.
Basically, what you want is to have several different static (blackhole)
routes, and be able to differenciate them at BGP level, for marking with
communities, etc. Correct?
This is easy with BIRD. Just use separate instances of the "static"
protocol, and filter using "proto" to disti
On 07/02/2015 04:23 AM, Israel G. Lugo wrote:
> protocol static temp_block {
> # DDOS mitigation, etc
> route 203.0.113.17/32 blackhole;
> }
Didn't make it clear in my example, but you can obviously have multiple
routes in a static instance:
protocol static temp_block {
r
ving addresses to spare, if it just means
you've got to start worrying about subnet scarcity? If the goal was
never having to worry about counting anymore, I propose that 128 bits is
far too little. Should've gone a full 256 and be done with it.
Regards,
Israel G. Lugo
P.S.: I'm 100% for IPv6 and $dayjob has been fully dual stacked for 10
years now.
On 07/09/2015 12:59 AM, Mark Andrews wrote:
> In message <559db604.8060...@lugosys.com>, "Israel G. Lugo" writes:
>> Doesn't seem to make sense at all for the ISP side, though. Standard
>> allocation /32. Giving out /48s. Even if we leave out proper subne
On 07/09/2015 02:15 AM, Owen DeLong wrote:
> If you’re trying to build a decent sized ISP in a /32, you’re doing it
> wrong. /32 is not the “standard size” — It’s the MINIMUM size.
I've addressed this and most of what you said in my earlier reply to
Mike Hammet (00:57:29 UTC). I was going to rep
On 07/09/2015 02:38 AM, Mark Andrews wrote:
> A single /48 has enough space/subnets cover the entire infrastructure
> of 99.% of ISPs even using /64's for p2p links rather than taking
> one /64 and subdividing that for all of the p2p links. Treat the ISP
> as a business customer of itself when
On 07/09/2015 02:31 AM, Owen DeLong wrote:
> Here’s the problem… You started at the wrong end and worked in the wrong
> direction in your planning.
>
> [...get larger allocation...]
>
> We are now left with only 1,041,888 /20s remaining. You still haven’t put a
> dent in it.
I am aware of the
I'm sorry Mel, I only now saw your email.
I'll quote from my reply to Owen, for the motivation behind my question:
> Speaking of IPv6's full potential: we're considering 32 subscriptions
> per client. I've read people thinking of things like IPv6-aware soda
> cans. Refrigerators. Wearables. Cars
nyone can help me on that, or provide advise on a better course of
action, I'm all ears :)
TIA,
--
Carlos G Mendioroz
Is there any specific dnssec mailing list, which might be more helpful.
DNSSEC Deployment
http://www.dnssec-deployment.org/
steve
On Aug 4, 2010, at 9:53 AM, Xavier Beaudouin wrote:
>
> Le 4 août 2010 à 15:14, Mirko Maffioli a écrit :
>
>> 2010/7/25 Laurens Vets :
>>>
>>> Cisco PIX: no, Cisco ASA: yes. It even runs under VMware... It's however
>>> very hackish... :)
>>
>> Cisco ASA under VMware?? :|
>
> CiscoASA is bas
On Apr 30, 2009, at 1:28 PM, Paul Jakma wrote:
Is the ESX Hypervisor useful without the Linux layer? Then, to what
extent do "based on" and "depends on" differ in the context of
software?
I needed DR-DOS 3 to make NetWare 3.12 boot, but I wouldn't consider
it to be "based on DOS".
On May 11, 2009, at 4:48 PM, Duane Waddle wrote:
On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 3:39 PM, Mikael Abrahamsson
wrote:
IIRC, you can turn the feature off WHEN it makes an issue.
Fixed that for you.
S550 attached to a 6509, Dell blade in a blade chassis with Power
connect switches cross-connected
examples on the website. The "g" stands for
generic.
I've been using poweradmin for management.
We've been using it as well in what I would consider a very small
setup: 150 domains, most with almost no traffic to speak of, but 3 or
4 with decent traffic (the high tra
On Jul 16, 2009, at 4:27 AM, Florian Weimer wrote:
OTOH, there doesn't seem to be a legitimate long-term use for business
purposes. (In my view, the secondary domain market is not
legitimate---online advertisers keep it alive to artificially increase
conversion rates, essentially defrauding bra
It looks like ATT has delegated some networks to our DNS servers. We
need to get those changed and have no idea on who the contacts are. Are
there any ATT dns admins that can contact me offline?
Thanks,
Patrick Felt
On Apr 9, 2009, at 6:04 PM, Charles Wyble wrote:
3) From what I understand it's not trivial to raise a manhole cover.
Most likely can't be done by one person. Can they be locked? Or were
the carriers simply relying on obscurity/barrier to entry?
Your understanding is incorrect. I'm an
On Apr 13, 2009, at 8:40 PM, telmn...@757.org wrote:
Better they cut the fiber instead of Oklahoma Citying the central
office.
I'm not sure that the "someone will alway s find the weakest link"
argument can be summed up any better than this.
If you don't believe it, you all need to spend
After the Katrina landfall a diverse group of wireless people started
organizing a relief effort, culminating in work around Waveland. There was
also a group from the NPGS in Monterey, who worked on the Boxing Day Tsunami
aftermath.
Does anyone have a similar contact set?
hello eric
i rec'd
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