First I am thrilled to see older Nanog meetings making it to youtube.
Having said that can the people putting up the files put the Nanog
meeting number in the title of the videos to make it easier to search
and determine relevance?
Thanks,
james
http://fusion.net/story/287592/internet-mapping-glitch-kansas-farm/
fusion just did a story on how this.
On Wed, Jun 8, 2016 at 3:10 PM, Spencer Ryan wrote:
> The center of the US is maxmind's unknown location. Fill out the form and
> they'll correct it.
>
>
> *Spencer Ryan* | Senior Systems
Ricardo,
I know from previous discussions on this list that Android phones are
looking for DHCPD leases and not /128's or /64's. From what I remember
this is due to the current requirement for multiple ipv6 subnets for
various applications (vpns among others) to function correctly. As a
result G
so who would you quantify as secure and reliable? who does not require
additional "services" besides registration or spend all their time trying
to upsell you?
james
On Wed, Sep 21, 2016 at 10:18 AM, Jim Mercer wrote:
>
> cheap, secure, reliable
>
> pick two.
>
> --jim
>
> On Mon, Sep 19, 2016
On Mon, Sep 11, 2017 at 3:40 PM, Sean Pedersen
wrote:
> We were recently approached by a company that does security consulting.
> Some
> of the functions they perform include discovery scans, penetration testing,
> bulk e-mail generation (phishing, malware, etc.), hosting fake botnets -
> basical
Greg,
I have a 4 byte ASN and have not had any issues with reach ability,
including the 2 websites you have linked.
James
Greg,
I don't see a routing database object for your routes pointing too your
AS394666 /24's, I only see one for AS12 for the /23 and /24's. It is
possible (and probable) you are being filtered due to that.
james
route: 216.165.124.0/23
descr: NEW YORK UNIVERSITY (added by MAINT-AS6517)
origin:
I had a vendor at $dayjob prior to my arrival who assigned all their
customers ip space based on the customer number. when i got there all the
internal network was assigned space from an company in the middle east.
$dayjob didn't have the in-house knowledge to know what was going on and as
they ne
> I don't understand why this is a problem if your ISP gives you a static
> address.
> There are, of course, other sources of addresses available as well.
> Nobody has yet presented me a situation where I would prefer to use ULA over
> GUA.
>
>> while link-local is necessary it's also probably no
>> Lets look at some issues here.
>>
>> 1) it's unlikely that a "normal" household with 2.5 kids and a dog/cat
>> will be able to qualify for their own end user assignment from ARIN.
>>
>
> Interesting...
>
> I have a "normal household".
> I lack 2.5 kids and have no dog or cat.
>
> I have my own A
On Tue, Aug 2, 2011 at 3:28 PM, Joel Jaeggli wrote:
>
> On Aug 2, 2011, at 2:42 PM, james machado wrote:
>
>>>> Lets look at some issues here.
>>>>
>>>> 1) it's unlikely that a "normal" household with 2.5 kids and a dog/cat
>>>
> I would argue that I am not an "abnormal" household by any definition other
> than
> my internet access and that even by that definition, I am not particularly
> abnormal
> where I live.
>
your based out of san jose, there might not be any other area like
that in the U.S. as far as connectivit
> It isn't hard to do some arithmetic and guess that if every household
> in the world had IPv6 connectivity from a relatively low-density
> service like the above example, we would still only burn through about
> 3% of the IPv6 address space on end-users (nothing said about server
> farms, etc. he
you might also try D-ITG http://www.grid.unina.it/software/ITG/index.php
james
d-itg works very well.
http://www.grid.unina.it/software/ITG/index.php you can create
reports of loss/jitter etc. windows and qos don't work so don't try
setting qos values as they will just be reset to 0 by the windows
tcp/ip stack.
james
I would use ldapsearch on that machine to make sure you can bind to
the AD server using the login credentials in your Site_Config. Make
sure you are using the proper certificates to connect via the TLS you
have configured. I've noticed that being one of the biggest problems
with ldap and Windows
my apologies - fat fingered the email address
james
2012/3/14 Masataka Ohta :
< stuff deleted >
> For high speed (fixed time) routed look up with 1M entries, SRAM is
> cheap at /24 and is fine at /32 but expensive and power consuming
> TCAM is required at /48.
>
> That's one reason why we should stay away from IPv6.
>
>
On Mon, Aug 6, 2012 at 3:55 PM, Owen DeLong wrote:
> That's simply not true at all...
>
> Let's look at what it takes to configure BGP as I suggested...
>
> 1. The ASN number of the two providers
> 2. The ASN to be used for the local side
> 3. The IP Address to use on the local end of each connect
On Wed, Aug 29, 2012 at 1:55 PM, STARNES, CURTIS
wrote:
> Sorry for the top post...
>
> Not necessarily a Level 3 problem but;
>
> We are announcing our /19 network as one block via BGP through AT&T, not
> broken up into smaller announcements.
> Earlier in the year I started receiving complaints
On Thu, Aug 30, 2012 at 11:50 AM, Blake Hudson wrote:
> Matt Addison wrote the following on 8/29/2012 6:08 PM:
>
>> Sent from my mobile device, so please excuse any horrible misspellings.
>>
>> On Aug 29, 2012, at 18:30, james machado wrote:
>>
>>> O
On Thu, Oct 18, 2012 at 7:00 AM, Jonathan Rogers wrote:
> I like the idea of looking at the ARP table periodically, but this presents
> some possible issues for us. The edge routers at our remote sites are Cisco
> 1841 devices, typically with either an MPLS T1 or a Public T1 (connected
> via an IA
On Mon, Oct 22, 2012 at 6:49 PM, Justin Krejci wrote:
> And since owen has not yet mentioned it, consider something that supports
> having : in its address as well.
>
> Sort of tangentially related, I had a support rep for a vendor once tell me
> that a 255 in the second or third octet was not v
Justin,
What are you trying to do? I had a similar situation as my rep got
the wrong product for BGP. I actually cleaned it up by talking to
support and I had to fill out a second BGP questionnaire but it was
resolved and turned up in a couple of days.
James
On Thu, Oct 15, 2015 at 11:38 AM, J
On Tue, Jun 30, 2015 at 1:43 PM, Ricky Beam wrote:
> On Tue, 30 Jun 2015 10:28:13 -0400, Justin M. Streiner
> wrote:
>>
>> There are still isolated pockets of devices out there speaking IPX,
>> DECnet, Appletalk, etc
>
>
> Indeed. I'm one of them. (rarely) ... IPX managed print server. It speaks
David,
check out exabgp https://github.com/Exa-Networks/exabgp
james
On Wed, Jul 1, 2015 at 8:19 AM, David H wrote:
> Hi all, I was wondering if anyone can recommend a software (preferable), or
> hardware-based router with an API, that supports BGP with tags on
> advertised routes? I want to u
On Aug 11, 2015 11:22 AM, "Colton Conor" wrote:
>
> We have an enterprise that has a headquarter office with redundant fiber
> connections, its own ASN, its own /22 IP block from ARIN, and a couple of
> gigabit internet connections from multiple providers. The office is taking
> full BGP routes fr
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