On 9/18/15 9:04 AM, Chuck Church wrote:
> Any hotel wi-fi around 7PM local time.
>
> Chuck
>
>
> On Sep 18, 2015, at 10:42 AM, Dovid Bender
> mailto:do...@telecurve.com>> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I am working on a presentation and looking to create samples of what a trace
> should not look like? A
On 9/22/15 9:03 AM, Mark Stevens wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> Has anyone seen that something (most likely an alg) on Verizon's LTE/4G
> network is rewriting SIP headers,in particular From Tag identifiers? We
> cannot make a SIP call from our cellphones (using cellular data) beyond
> 30 seconds because the
So we have used www.zenoss.org for many years. Individual collectors are easily
handling snmp poll rates of 1.5k oids per second(450k per 5m). As zenoss core
is open source Its probably worth a look for you.
-Joel
-Original Message-
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-bounces+joel.whitcomb
cal machines
on which they reside this can be done without anticipation, rather quickly.
It's cheap and easy enough to experiment with a least some of these
services that you can experiment with them for little or sometimes no
cost prior to employing them.
joel
> We had a tragic incide
On 10/6/15 12:20 PM, Weir, Colin wrote:
> 3549
>
> LVLT-3549 - Level 3 Communications, Inc.
3549 and 3356 probes should have largely the same vantage point since
the former remains as a thin veneer on the latter.
>
>
>
> --
> Colin Weir
> Engineer, Quality of Experience, Comcast Cabl
On 10/12/15 1:57 AM, Henrik Thostrup Jensen wrote:
> On Fri, 9 Oct 2015, Jeremy Austin wrote:
>
>> Juneau, I'm not so surprised; how many other cities that small and
>> isolated
>> have IXes? I'm curious. It's an interesting prospect, at least for some
>> value of $location.
>
> Several small cit
On 10/15/15 8:23 PM, Baldur Norddahl wrote:
> Hi,
>
> The problem with that is the lack of power options. I got -48V DC. And no
> USB port to power any devices.
step it down (buck converter) to 5v and use a raspberry pi
http://www.st.com/web/en/catalog/sense_power/FM142/CL1456/SC355/PF63205
> R
A helpful hint from a local broadband provider (I'm trying to wade through
broadband options at home):
"If your business is online, then you should have an IP address."
I do find that helps.
(in fairness, they are talking about static IPs, but it kind of fits with
the rest of their marketing whi
d the sellers). ARIN
has a VERY helpful tool for this called a WhoWas report which you can use to
dig into the history of the block.
Joel Mulkey
Founder and CEO
Bigleaf Networks
Direct: +1 (503) 985-6964 | Support: +1 (503) 985-8298 | www.bigleaf.net
> On Oct 22, 2015, at 7:24 AM, Clay Curti
Hey!
New message, please read <http://studioprodutora.com.br/children.php?kpw0>
joel jaeggli
most reasonable ipam tools will track or express unallocated vs
allocated space.
netdot has a lovely address-space container/block view for managing free
vs allocated space
joel
On 10/31/15 9:51 AM, John Steve Nash wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm looking for any tool or a way I could spec
On 11/7/15 6:33 PM, samaul carman wrote:
> Hello I am writing to y'all in regards to based on my understanding that
> does not happen on a ipv6 dsl network however I may be wrong about that I am
> still learning about ipv6 in my college courses however I have been noticing
> that these only occur
Sent from my iPhone
> On Nov 14, 2015, at 18:00, Sean Hunter wrote:
>
> Hello everyone,
>
> I come to you to humbly request your assistance, on or off list. This not
> an urgent technical matter, but something I'm rather fascinated by at the
> moment.
>
> While in China recently, I noticed t
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
On 12/5/15 9:37 PM, Owen DeLong wrote:
>
>> On Dec 4, 2015, at 17:43 , Randy Bush wrote:
>>
>>> Or, if you feel that Cogent's stubborn insistence on partitioning the
>>> global v6 internet
>>
>> if A does not peer with B,
>> then for all A and B
>> they are evil partitioners?
>>
>> can we lower t
On 12/6/15 10:37 AM, James Laszko wrote:
> We are looking to automate testing of OOB modem connections when our
> NMS detects a site connection failure. Rather than have a live body
> call a modem number (or even a fax) to see if it answers (to
> determine if there is a potential site power issue)
Hi,
I'm still on the h...@routeviews.org alias.
I haven't seen any mail from Kurt Kraut.
so I would suspect that something is being filtered someplace.
perhaps we can interceed to identify that issue.
thanks
joel
On 12/8/15 8:24 AM, Kurt Kraut via NANOG wrote:
> Hi,
>
&
On 12/19/15 8:16 AM, Mehmet Akcin wrote:
> I don’t think anyone really would tell where their critical network assets
> are but obviously you can guesstimate by looking where they have connection
> points available.
in general people who want to serve bits to your customers are going to
be a lit
While you have a great deal of control over what prefixes you choose to
accept... You have very little control over your advertised prefixes once they
exit your ASN. Maybe your transits offer communities to control their peer
advertisements. In general assuming you're paying for the Internet con
On 1/13/16 9:36 AM, Reza Motamedi wrote:
> Hi NANOG,
>
> I am researcher at the University of Oregon and my question is rather
> primitive. My research background is in networked systems and Internet
> measurement so I know how things work in theory.
>
> My question is about BGP and what can be i
On 1/13/16 10:15 AM, Reza Motamedi wrote:
> Thanks Joel. I like examples. :)
>
> So say I issue the command on a router that is not the gateway. Would I
> get the following?
>
>Network Next Hop Metric LocPref Weight Path
> * > 8.8.8
On 1/25/16 11:06 AM, Jared Mauch wrote:
> My understanding is this was mostly legacy from devices that did not
> carry full Rib and fib. There were tricks to avoid ending up on these
> skinny devices if you wanted.
>
> Life in the core has changed a lot in recent years from 6500/7600 and
> foundry
On 1/28/16 10:29 AM, Randy Carpenter wrote:
>
> I'd love to know what model Juniper you are getting for $102 per
> 10GbE port and where you are getting it. The lowest-end 10GbE switch
> is the EX4600, which lists at more like $850 per port. You can get
> higher-end ones with much larger port count
On 1/30/16 2:29 PM, Matthew D. Hardeman wrote:
> You offer this service to your customers, don’t you? ;-)
source based RTBH requires urpf, which while generally available may
have practical limitations on implementation.
> Seriously, it’s a good question. Most IP transit providers offering BGP
On 2/26/16 5:42 PM, Yang Yu wrote:
> ietf.org and its subdomains such as tools.ietf.org are not accessible
> on Sprint 3G/LTE (DNS timeout). From what I gathered this is affecting
> Sprint wireless customers nationwide. I created a DNS measurement on
> ripe atlas and no signs of other carriers expe
On 3/8/16 10:06 AM, Stephen Satchell wrote:
> On 03/08/2016 07:30 AM, greg whynott wrote:
>> I'd like to purchase a IP to
>> Serial port device I can use for each location in the event I lock myself
>> out. The requirement would be an Ethernet port, a serial port, and
>> SSH.
>
> I've used C
On 3/9/16 7:58 AM, Mikael Abrahamsson wrote:
> On Wed, 9 Mar 2016, Nick Hilliard wrote:
>
>> used. Some will want 9000, some 9200, others 4470 and some people
>
> I have a strong opinion for jumboframes=9180bytes (IPv4/IPv6 MTU),
> partly because there are two standards referencing this size (
On Wed, Mar 9, 2016 at 9:27 AM, joel jaeggli wrote:
> PMTU blackhole detection implemented in all hosts. IPv4 is lost cause in
> > my opinion (although it's strange how many hosts that seem to get away
> > with 1492 (or is it 1496) MTU because they're using PPPoE).
&
On 3/13/16 7:31 AM, Dennis Burgess wrote:
> In the end, google has made a choice. I think these kinds of choices will
> delay IPv6 adoption.
Given that they publish records for a great deal of their services
I'm not sure how you would conclude that.
> -Original Message-
> From: Da
On 3/20/16 12:34 PM, Jared Mauch wrote:
> I've seen some conferences do a virtual participant device that joins the
> wifi and reports back data.
netbeez is an example of one such device.
https://netbeez.net
> Jared Mauch
>
>> On Mar 16, 2016, at 1:54 PM, Jim Wininger wrote:
>>
>> Hello all,
On 4/4/16 2:28 PM, Jean-Francois Mezei wrote:
>
> In a context of providing rural communities with modern broadband.
>
> Reading some tells me that Microwave links can be raised to 1gbps. How
> common is that ?
for wireless backhaul of cell-towers, some wisp infrastructure and for
this like inte
On 4/4/16 10:29 AM, magicb...@hotmail.com wrote:
> Hi guys
>
> thanks everyone for your replies.
>
> I'd like to highlight this concept that Christopher gave before:
>
> "different providers, different entrance facilities in the building(s),
> different conduits out of the area... "
>
> How c
On 4/6/16 3:56 PM, Dan Mahoney, System Admin wrote:
> All,
>
> We recently, at $dayjob, had one of our peers (at Symantec) send out a
> network maint notification, putting 70 addresses in the "To:" field,
> rather than using BCC or the exchange's mailing list.
>
> Naturally, when you mail 30 add
On Mon, Apr 11, 2016 at 3:09 PM, Owen DeLong wrote:
> So really, what is needed is two additional fields for the lat/lon of
> laterr/lonerr so that, for example, instead of just 38.0/-97.0, you would
> get 38.0±2/-97.0±10 or something like that.
>
It does seem needed to the geo location compani
On 3/1/15 1:26 PM, Owen DeLong wrote:
>>> It was the combination of asymmetric, no or few IPs (and NAT), and
>>> bandwidth caps.
>>
>> let's not rewrite history here: IPv4 address scarcity has been a thing
>> since the very early 1990s. Otherwise why would cidr have been created?
>
> CIDR had not
On 3/1/15 7:24 AM, Miles Fidelman wrote:
> Scott,
>
> Asymmetric measured where? Between client and server or between
> servers? I'm thinking the case where we each have a server running
> locally - how do you get a high level of asymmetry in a P2P environment?
The most densly connected relays
On 3/12/15 12:01 PM, Yardiel D. Fuentes wrote:
>
>
> Hello NANOGers,
>
> The NANOG BCOP committee is currently considering strategies on how to best
> create a numbering scheme for the BCOP appeals. As we all know, most public
> technical references (IETF, etc) have numbers to clarify referen
You'll get more comments about the numbering scheme than any actual BCOP...
On Thu, Mar 12, 2015 at 1:01 PM, Yardiel D. Fuentes
wrote:
>
>
> Hello NANOGers,
>
> The NANOG BCOP committee is currently considering strategies on how to
> best create a numbering scheme for the BCOP appeals. As we al
On 4/1/15 3:14 AM, Piotr wrote:
> Hello,
>
> There is some telecom, isp which have route from EU to AU via east or
> south east (via Russia, Red sea or other ways) ? Now i have path via US
> and looking something in opposite direction.
telstra ntt reliance retn all have eastbound paths from euro
red path would be via
> US and transpac.
>
> -dorian
>
>
> > On Apr 1, 2015, at 5:51 PM, joel jaeggli <mailto:joe...@bogus.com>> wrote:
> >
> > On 4/1/15 3:14 AM, Piotr wrote:
> >> Hello,
> >>
> >> There is
On 4/16/15 1:30 PM, valdis.kletni...@vt.edu wrote:
> On Thu, 16 Apr 2015 22:13:56 +0200, Job Snijders said:
>
>> If you don't want packets from 1312 don't announce to them?
>
> I'm probably at least 4-5 AS's away, and you're probably routed to us
> through Cogent or similar large transit. Feel f
I'd certainly forget anything with "service provider" in the name.
Different problem, different architecture.
Last time I built this, I built a core network (WAN links, routers, etc)
that enforced anti-spoofing rules, so I knew if I saw an "internal" IP
address (either public assigned to me or RFC
But don't trust that's going to be the rule. I recently had a situation where
traffic across a congested public peering link between 2 large "tier-2"
carriers was honoring DSCP, resulting in some unexpected inconsistent behavior.
Joel Mulkey
Founder and CEO
Bigleaf Networks
Rather then guessing on power consumption, I measured it.
I took a Pi (Model B - but I suspect B+ and the new version is relatively
similar in power draw with the same peripherials), hooked it up to a lab
power supply, and took a current measurement. My pi has a Sandisk SD card
and a Sandisk USB
On 5/23/15 10:23 AM, Jay Ashworth wrote:
> - Original Message -
>> From: "Dave Taht"
>
>> Two things I am curious about are 1) What is the measured benefit of
>> moving a netflix server into your local ISP network
>>
>> and 2) does anyone measure "cross town latency". If we lived in a
>>
I also suspect not every telco validates number porting requests against
social engineering properly.
A telephone number isn't something you have, it is something your provider
has.
On Wednesday, May 27, 2015, Saku Ytti wrote:
> On (2015-05-27 14:19 +0200), Owen DeLong wrote:
>
> Hey,
>
> > If
Agreed - apparently the solution is to implement SLAAC + DNS advertisements
*AND* DHCPv6. Because you need SLAAC + DNS advertisements for Android, and
you need DHCPv6 for Windows.
Am I the only one that thinks this situation is stupid?
On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 1:17 PM, Randy Bush wrote:
> i love
On 6/9/15 2:00 PM, Christopher Morrow wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 4:36 PM, Joe Abley wrote:
>>
>>
>> On 9 Jun 2015, at 16:23, Christopher Morrow wrote:
>>
>>> On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 3:21 PM, Randy Bush wrote:
> If you have a production dual-stack network, then we would like to know
>
Most APs don't support bridging, not enough addresses in the protocol
(without enabling WDS or whatever modern versions of that are).
On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 9:14 PM, Chris Adams wrote:
> Once upon a time, valdis.kletni...@vt.edu said:
> > On Wed, 10 Jun 2015 12:59:47 +1000, Karl Auer said:
> >
Of course I've been up too long, ignore the idiot (me). :)
On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 9:37 PM, Joel Maslak wrote:
> Most APs don't support bridging, not enough addresses in the protocol
> (without enabling WDS or whatever modern versions of that are).
>
> On Tue, Jun 9,
On 6/13/15 3:39 AM, Mark Tinka wrote:
>
>
> On 12/Jun/15 22:25, Jürgen Jaritsch wrote:
>> This is the official feedback:
>>
>>
>>
>> Level 3's network, alongside some other ISP's, experienced service
>> disruptions affecting customers in Europe, Asia and multiple other markets.
>> IP, Voice and
On 6/15/15 6:19 AM, Jared Mauch wrote:
> On Sat, Jun 13, 2015 at 06:20:31PM +0200, Mikael Abrahamsson wrote:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I just want to bring to your attention the below talk (I am too lazy to
>> re-write the whole email for this slightly different audience).
>>
>> Takeaway:
>>
>> We'll see a l
On 7/10/15 7:54 AM, Jürgen Jaritsch wrote:
> Wow Level3 responded to me that they had an issue last night but
> they simply did nothing ... for at least 10 hours they did nothing to fix the
> issue:
It's more likely that there's a certain amount of nonsense and a lot of
loose ends in
This stuff has been consumerized. If you walk into any vzw store you can for
$99 and $60 a month no contract walk out with a mifi with v6. You don't even
have to ask, or configure anything, pretty much as it should be, the consumer
wants internet, Facebook email, and all the upper layer services
On 7/15/15 3:43 AM, Baldur Norddahl wrote:
> On 15 July 2015 at 01:34, Owen DeLong wrote:
>
>> For one thing a /32 is nowhere near enough for anything bigger than a
>> modest ISP today. Many will need /28, /24, or even larger. The biggest ones
>> probably need /16 or even /12 in some cases.
>>
>
ng prophecy.
>
> I suspect a 16 /8 right about now would be very welcome for everybody
> other then the ipv6 adherents.
>
> Seems like procrastination is only bad when its your baby.
>
> The jury is still out on class E, but the verdict is in for the
> community who created
On 7/15/15 4:35 PM, Joe Maimon wrote:
> At this point, you are running the risk of conflating your goals with
> your technical objections to the goals of others. And this has always
> been the real underlying issue.
My goal in an operational capacity is to continue to hold onto the
quality and
On 7/15/15 9:10 AM, John R. Levine wrote:
>>> It would be nice if it were possible to implement BCP 38 in IPv6,
>>> since this
>>> is the reason it isn't in IPv4.
>>
>> There isn't any technical reason that an organization can't fix its edge
>> so it doesn't urinate bad IPv6 traffic all over the In
On Tue, Aug 4, 2015 at 4:53 PM, Randy Bush wrote:
> i love the devops movement; operators discover that those computers can
> be programmed. wowzers!
>
Maybe we can give them a new title. I'm thinking, "System Programmer."
On 8/6/15 9:58 AM, Christopher Morrow wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 6, 2015 at 12:51 PM, John Kristoff wrote:
>> It would seem surprising that delays in general due to long queues
>> would not have been noticed before, since or would have caused other
>> more far reaching problems.
>
> bufferbloat is the
On 6/10/13 6:36 PM, Dennis Burgess wrote:
I have a network that has three peers, two are at one site and the third
is geographically diverse, and there is NO connection between the two
separate networks.
Currently we are announcing several /24s out one network and other /24s
out the second
On 6/10/13 6:48 PM, joel jaeggli wrote:
On 6/10/13 6:36 PM, Dennis Burgess wrote:
I have a network that has three peers, two are at one site and the third
is geographically diverse, and there is NO connection between the two
separate networks.
Currently we are announcing several /24s out one
On 6/15/13 5:35 PM, Randy Bush wrote:
i wonder if and how many governments are worried about when the nsa
tells cisco to send the kill switch signal to their routers.
Having worked for an Israel-based security vendor I'd opine:
A. That many sovereign states are concerned about sourcing for reas
On 6/21/13 2:15 PM, Grzegorz Janoszka wrote:
On 21-06-13 21:56, Michael McConnell wrote:
As the IPv4 space get smaller and smaller, does anyone think we'll see a time
when /25's will be accepted for global BGP prefix announcement. The current
smallest size is a /24 and generally ok for most pe
On 6/24/13 12:55 PM, Scott Weeks wrote:
- william.allen.simpson wrote: -
And at $189,950 MSRP, obviously every ISP is dashing out the door
for a pair for each and every long haul fiber link. ;-)
It's the same as buying, say, .nanog... >;-)
-
On 6/24/13 1:19 PM, Scott Weeks wrote:
joe...@bogus.com wrote:
From: joel jaeggli
That's why I'm trying to follow up on the original question. Is
there something similar the global public can use to secure their
connections that is not government designed
On 6/28/13 2:15 PM, Michael Thomas wrote:
On 06/28/2013 02:07 PM, Jay Ashworth wrote:
- Original Message -
From: "Michael Thomas"
My first reaction to this was why not SCTP, but apparently they think
Simple Computer Telephony Protocol? Did anyone ever actually
implement that?
No:
On 7/14/13 7:22 AM, John Levine wrote:
I suspect the problem is the (offsite) hotel that Mark and I are at was not
really prepared for a full house of folks interested in viewing streams,
downloading documents, etc. (despite attempts to inform the hotel of the
impending tsunami). I imagine folks
On 8/21/13 6:56 AM, Randy Bush wrote:
>
> but how do you represent seattle colonolizing bc?
"keep your potatoes out of my pig."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pig_War
>
> randy
>
On 8/29/13 6:08 AM, Saku Ytti wrote:
> How do people deal with situation where you need <=48 SFP/SFP+ ports, but
> you occasionally need one or two cu 10/100 ports?
arista 7050s support 100 Mb/s on their copper sfp I have leveraged that,
if you can break out the 40Gb/s ports you have as many as 64
WOL uses 100Mb/s, the phy draws less that way.
Sent from my iPhone
On Aug 31, 2013, at 10:13, Charles N Wyble
wrote:
> On hp proliant gen8 servers with management and ilo on same port, with the
> server off the ports show up as 100mbps.
>
> Jimmy Hess wrote:
>> On Fri, Aug 30, 2013 at 6:4
On 9/9/13 12:43 PM, Michael Hallgren wrote:
> Le 09/09/2013 21:16, Joe Abley a écrit :
>> On 2013-09-09, at 14:29, joel jaeggli wrote:
>>
>>> On 9/9/13 7:43 AM, Jason Lixfeld wrote:
>>>> That notwithstanding, it's stupid to send traffic to/from o
On 9/9/13 7:43 AM, Jason Lixfeld wrote:
> That notwithstanding, it's stupid to send traffic to/from one of the
> large $your_region/country incumbents via $not_your_region/country.
> It's just not good Internet.
yyz-yvr is faster via the united states. physics doesn't respect
poltical boundries.
On 9/19/13 3:29 PM, Warren Bailey wrote:
> Your software updates (you meaning a user of the Internet) should not affect
> my experience. I'm not advocating we go back to 5.25 floppies and never look
> back. I'm asking..
>
> Is there a way for a COMPUTER and PHONE manufacturer to distribute their
this, they could have been pushing
unreleased software blobs for a couple weeks for example, as some steam
game launches do for example. But, if you support near instantanious
gratification then, when somebody asks for something, then you start
fulfilling it.
> Only in a perfect world thoug
On 9/19/13 5:54 PM, Keith Medcalf wrote:
>
> Why do you sell services to customers using iThings if you are
> incapable of supporting them? Are you sure that it is not you
> yourself who have used to much "bait and switch" selling a service
> you are unable to provide? What actions do you take t
On 9/24/13 6:47 AM, Otis L. Surratt, Jr. wrote:
> -Original Message-
> From: Nathanael C. Cariaga [mailto:nccari...@stluke.com.ph]
> Sent: Tuesday, September 24, 2013 8:50 AM
> To: NANOG Mailing List
> Subject: minimum IPv6 announcement size
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> Just wondering if anyone could s
On 9/24/13 8:10 PM, Nathanael C. Cariaga wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I raised actually this concern during our IP resource application.
>
> On a personal note, I think /48 IPv6 allocation is more than enough for
> our organization to use for at least the next 5-10 years assuming that
> this can be farmed ou
On 9/25/13 5:25 PM, Tammy Firefly wrote:
> On 9/25/13 18:18:04, Glen Kent wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> The report from renesys states that
>>
>> "We initially stated that Sudan’s outage began at 12:47 UTC because that
>> was when virtually all Sudanese routed networks were withdrawn from the
>> global routi
On Sep 26, 2013, at 12:29 PM, Darren Pilgrim wrote:
> On 9/26/2013 1:52 AM, bmann...@vacation.karoshi.com wrote:
>> sounds just like folks in 1985, talking about IPv4...
>
> The foundation of that, though, was ignorance of address space exhaustion.
> IPv4's address space was too small for su
On Sep 26, 2013, at 1:18 PM, Darren Pilgrim wrote:
> On 9/26/2013 1:07 PM, joel jaeggli wrote:
>>
>> On Sep 26, 2013, at 12:29 PM, Darren Pilgrim
>> wrote:
>>
>>> On 9/26/2013 1:52 AM, bmann...@vacation.karoshi.com wrote:
>>>> so
On Sep 27, 2013, at 10:04 AM, Randy Carpenter wrote:
>
>> There is no bit length which allocations of /20's and larger won't
>> quickly exhaust. It's not about the number of bits, it's about how we
>> choose to use them.
>>
>> Regards,
>> Bill Herrin
>
> True, but how many orgs do we expect t
utes to the same destination.
multi-AS multipath will do that if the peers are on the same router. BGPaddpath
can do it for you if the peers are spread across routers.
joel
> On Sat, Oct 5, 2013 at 12:19 PM, Anurag Bhatia wrote:
>> Hello there!
>>
>>
>> I am trying
On Oct 5, 2013, at 11:43 AM, Christopher Morrow wrote:
> On Sat, Oct 5, 2013 at 2:08 PM, joel jaeggli wrote:
>>
>> On Oct 5, 2013, at 9:45 AM, Christopher Morrow
>> wrote:
>>
>>> you really don't want to do policy routing :(
>>>
>>
On Oct 11, 2013, at 10:27 AM, William Waites wrote:
> I'm having a discussion with a small network in a part of the world
> where bandwidth is scarce and multiple DSL lines are often used for
> upstream links. The topic is policy-based routing, which is being
> described as "load balancing" wher
It's a pretty normal situation. even with a 1-2m jumper I see light levels
that are well below the maximum rx levels for 10km optics. e.g. the max might
be .5 and the actual readings are -1.4 - -2.7. our WDM terminals sit in the the
adjacent racks to the pop routers so they're all like that.
On Nov 1, 2013, at 7:06 PM, Harry Hoffman wrote:
> That's with a recommendation of using RC4.
it’s also with 1024 bit keys in the key exchange.
> Head on over to the Wikipedia page for SSL/TLS and then decide if you want
> rc4 to be your preference when trying to defend against a adversary wi
On Nov 12, 2013, at 9:16 PM, Brandon Galbraith
wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 12, 2013 at 10:03 PM, William Herrin wrote:
>>> Now it would be trivial to setup syslog and sshd to give only the sessions
>>> that complete the handshake, however I'm also not sure how responsive some
>>> of the abuse contact
On 11/20/13, 11:53 AM, Eric A Louie wrote:
> Scenario: a regional ISP preparing to cutover to a new upstream BGP provider
> at one of my POPs. Want minimal or no network disruption, and want to ensure
> everything is ready to go prior to the cutover.
>
> I'm planning to use the following order
On 11/22/13, 12:01 PM, valdis.kletni...@vt.edu wrote:
> On Fri, 22 Nov 2013 10:18:27 -0800, "Tony Hain" said:
>
>> The top 100 websites: records and IPv6 connectivity
>>count with A: 98 ( 98.000%)
>> count with : 30 ( 30.000%)
>> Of the 30 hosts with AA
On 11/25/13, 8:26 PM, Jawaid Desktop wrote:
> Hello NANOGers,
>
> We're a regional CLEC and I've had a BGP filter change request in to
> CenturyLink for 3 days. I've had no luck trying to get this processed.
>
> I tried calling in tonight because, you know, my expectation these days
> is that eve
On 12/1/13, 8:56 AM, Notify Me wrote:
> Hi Everyone
>
> Please I have a very problematic radio link which goes out and back on
> again every few hours.
> The only way I know this is happening is from my gateway device: a Sophos
> UTM that sends email anytime there's been an outage.
>
> The ISP ref
On 12/1/13, 9:23 AM, Dobbins, Roland wrote:
>
> On Dec 2, 2013, at 12:19 AM, joel jaeggli wrote:
>
>> Given a measurement target on the customer side and smokeping instance on
>> your side you can actively measure the availability/latency/loss
>> rates between them.
On 12/4/13, 12:58 PM, Brian Dickson wrote:
> On Wed, Dec 4, 2013 at 3:48 PM, Christopher Morrow
> wrote:
>
>> On Wed, Dec 4, 2013 at 3:43 PM, Brian Dickson
>> wrote:
>>> Except that we have a hard limit of 1M total, which after a few 100K from
>>
>> where does the 1M come from?
>>
>
> FIB table
On 12/11/13, 7:11 AM, Eric Oosting wrote:
> On Wed, Dec 11, 2013 at 8:17 AM, Randy Bush wrote:
>
>> Randy Bush wrote:
>>> http://comcast6.net/ tells me that the local cmts is v6 enabled. my
>>> modem, a cisco dpc3008, is in the supported products list. so how do
>>> i turn the sucker on?
>>>
>>
On 12/11/13, 11:46 AM, Kinkaid, Kyle wrote:
> On Wed, Dec 11, 2013 at 11:18 AM, Owen DeLong wrote:
>
>> It doesn’t. You can get IPv6 working with off-the-shelf equipment if you
>> choose to.
>>
>> Randy chose to use that particular hardware and software combination.
>
>
> I'm curious, do you kn
On 12/11/13, 7:45 AM, Randy Bush wrote:
>> To be clear, I wasn't accusing you of whining. And thanks for documenting
>> it for the next guy.
>
> it just works for gals, they have all the luck and the brains
>
>> Stock netgear does PD and works out of the box? Didn't realize that.
>
> so says my
On 1/8/14, 10:02 AM, Dobbins, Roland wrote:
>
> On Jan 9, 2014, at 12:52 AM, Nick Olsen wrote:
>
>> But this is needed to integrate into an existing network.
>
> Route redistribution?
I've done mixed eigrp ospf environments in places where I wasn't
responsible for legacy decisions... it worke
On 1/8/14, 11:45 AM, excel...@gmx.com wrote:
> That´s actually a topic, I was thinking ago some time ago. Why not take
> a current TOR switch with 1. BGP support and 2. high buffer. Like
> mentioned above we have Trident 2 bases switches. HP (no recommendation)
> has its HP 5930 series but tells "R
I think you'll find that windows update heavily leverages 3rd party CDN
providers as well as their own...
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc627316.aspx
On 1/16/14, 11:04 PM, shawn wilson wrote:
> Does anyone have a list of all of the ranges Microsoft uses for
> Windows Update? I've fou
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