On 5/10/16 21:05, Joe Klein wrote:
Is this group aware of the incident with tock.usno.navy.mil &
tick.usno.navy.mil on November 19. 2012 2107 UTC, when the systems lost 12
years for the period of one hour, then return?
The reasons were not fully explained, but the impact was global. Routers,
s
On 5/24/16 05:17, Mitchell Lewis wrote:
Hi,I am looking to validate the performance specs of a core router. I am
looking for a network traffic simulator which can simulate 40 gbps of traffic.
I am looking for a simulator with sfp+ ports.
I am interested in any input as to brands to look at, b
On 5/22/18 7:04 AM, steve ulrich wrote:
fwiw - there's a potentially significant loss of visibility w/SR from a
traffic management perspective depending on how it's deployed. though, i
doubt the OP is really driving at this point.
the data plane behavior on LDP is swap oriented, while the dat
On 6/14/18 11:56 AM, james jones wrote:
I am working on an personal experiment and was wondering what is the best
option for running BGP in a docker base container. I have seen a lot blogs
and docs referencing Quagga. I just want to make sure I am not over looking
any other options before I di
On 9/22/11 11:38 , Charles N Wyble wrote:
On 09/22/2011 05:37 AM, Pierce Lynch wrote:
Andreas Echavez [mailto:andr...@livejournalinc.com] originally wrote:
Ultimately, the network is as reliable as you build it. With
software, it's much cheaper to divide and scale horizontally.
Hardware devices
On 10/31/11 19:33 , Justine Sherry wrote:
:) I should've guessed that you guys, of all people, would notice the
discrepancy.
I used to be at the UW; I registered for this list using my UW email
address. Rather than re-register in order to be able to post to the
list, I just sent from my old emai
On Mon, Nov 19, 2012 at 11:10 AM, Nick Olsen wrote:
> I think this would be true if they offered some form of paid peering.
>
> Google want's a good fast route to your customers, And your customers want
> a good fast route to Google.
>
> IF Google ran its transit at or near congestion. This could
On 1/26/15 14:53, micah anderson wrote:
Hi,
I know that specially programmed ASICs on dedicated hardware like Cisco,
Juniper, etc. are going to always outperform a general purpose server
running gnu/linux, *bsd... but I find the idea of trying to use
proprietary, NSA-backdoored devices difficul
On 8/15/15 09:47, Glen Kent wrote:
Hi,
Is it fair to say that most traffic drops happen in the access layers, or
the first and the last miles, and the % of packet drops in the core are
minimal? So, if the packet has made it past the first mile and has
"entered" the core then chances are high t
On 1/20/16 08:25, Naslund, Steve wrote:
Helicopters near the Super Bowl are cleared to be there and are flown by vetted
professional pilots. A human pilot in a helicopter presumably has some kind of
qualification to be there while a drone (although I don't like that word) could be flown
by
Schprokits was mentioned at NANOG63 but http://www.schprokits.com/
doesn't look too good.
What happened?
On 4/15/15 07:28, Rod Beck wrote:
Hi,
As you all know, transit costs in the wholesale market today a few
percent of what it did in 2000. I assume that most of that decline is
due to a modified version of Moore's Law (I don't believe optics
costs decline 50% every 18 months) and the advent of
On 5/6/15 15:56, Randy Bush wrote:
a fellow researcher wants
> to make the case that in some scenarios it is very important for a
> network operator to be able to specify that traffic should *not*
> traverse a certain switch/link/group of switches/group of links
> (that's t
Would a prototypical neteng suffice?
On 5/18/15 13:48, Christopher Morrow wrote:
if there's a canonical neteng/ops person around it'd be handy to get a
contact off-list :) I have a question to ask... about bgp and paths
and fun stuff such as that!
(probably a traceroute or 'show ip bgp' would s
On 6/10/15 08:36, Jeff McAdams wrote:
There is no
other rational way to interpret your statement than to be a statement
of Google's position.
False dichotomies suck.
On 6/25/15 07:49, Jared Mauch wrote:
On Jun 25, 2015, at 10:08 AM, Phil Rosenthal wrote:
On Jun 25, 2015, at 9:32 AM, Christopher Morrow wrote:
geolocation is hard :(
If you would like to see how Google has your geolocation set, check:
curl http://redirector.c.youtube.com/report_mappi
On 6/29/15 20:17, Johnny Eriksson wrote:
Javier Henderson wrote:
Or XNS. On the other hand, people did have a nice career with
SNA...but they weren't trying to push packets over the
LAT
.daytime
Monday 29-Jun-2015 20:10:46
.pjob
Job 3 at ODEN User BYGG [10,335] TTY4
.where tty4
On Fri, Jun 28, 2013 at 1:23 PM, Michael Thomas wrote:
> On 06/28/2013 01:16 PM, Josh Hoppes wrote:
>
>> My first question is, how are they going to keep themselves from
>> congesting links?
>>
>
> The FAQ claims they're paying attention to that, but I haven't read the
> details. I sure hope they
On 8/13/07, Leo Bicknell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> In a message written on Mon, Aug 13, 2007 at 02:29:14PM +0200, Eliot Lear
> wrote:
> > This assumes "the real problem" is CPU performance, where many have
> > argued that the real problem is memory bandwidth. Memory doesn't track
> > Moore's
On Tue, May 10, 2011 at 13:58, Iljitsch van Beijnum wrote:
> On 10 mei 2011, at 22:31, Warren Kumari wrote:
>
>>> :: I applaud the first step, but I'm bothered by the fact that no second
>>> step is planned.
>
>> Igor is right on both counts here -- 0.05% is definitely noticeable at these
>> sor
On Wed, May 11, 2011 at 23:10, Franck Martin wrote:
> I think the yahoo test should just differentiate between no IPv6 and IPv6
> is slow (test between 3s and 10s). Like:
>
> We have detected that you have IPv6 and will be able to access our site on
> IPv6 day, but your user experience may not be
On Sat, Jun 11, 2011 at 21:33, Joe Hamelin wrote:
> Joe Wood passed in his sleep Friday morning. The only man I knew that had
> Juniper and Cisco logos tattooed on his forearms. A true Internet Rockstar
> who started at a legacy ISP in Seattle, moved to Flying Crocodile, and then
> to design a f
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