[02:09] I had a quick play with bhyve in 10.0 and never got anywhere with it. Maybe I should revisit it [02:10] I see that libvirt supports it now, that will make my life easier [03:14] *** mnathani_ has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 245 seconds) [03:21] *** mnathani_ has joined #arpnetworks [03:51] jbergstroem: how stable do you find it following -current on freebsd? [09:18] *** himuraken has quit IRC (Remote host closed the connection) [09:22] *** himuraken has joined #arpnetworks [09:26] *** himuraken has quit IRC (Remote host closed the connection) [09:26] *** himuraken has joined #arpnetworks [10:02] *** m0unds has quit IRC (Quit: WeeChat 1.1.1) [10:02] *** m0unds has joined #arpnetworks [11:15] hrm it seems the routing situation hasn't changed at all from Cogent's perspective [12:37] *** easymac has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 244 seconds) [12:39] *** easymac has joined #arpnetworks [12:39] *** easymac has quit IRC (Changing host) [12:39] *** easymac has joined #arpnetworks [13:27] static: yeh i checked about 7 or 8 pm [13:28] erk 7 or 8 am utc [13:28] i wonder if it didn't make the deadline or what [14:31] staticsafe: have you tried contacting their noc? I know you are not a cogent customer or anything so not sure how helpful they would be [14:31] they would politely tell me to fuck off :P [14:32] but all their customers cant reach you either [14:32] :) [14:39] i don't think it's cogent's fault anyway [14:39] cos ntt isn't working either [14:41] ntt is directly connected to arp though isnt it? [14:41] yes [14:42] Seen by #peers: 15 [14:42] that number is rising [14:42] what is it now? [14:42] 15 [14:42] that's what it was yesterday [14:42] was 5 yesterday [14:42] when I tried [14:42] it's ~230 for other ip's [14:42] it was 15 when i tried [14:52] would the 32 bit ASN make a difference? [14:53] maybe [14:53] Seen by #peers: 15 [14:53] 9 orochi-sov-interconnect.mythic-beasts.com (93.93.133.42) 94 msec 99 msec 93 msec [14:53] 10 192.67.222.1 89 msec 88 msec 89 msec [14:53] does that hop 10 mean someone else is advertising the net block? [14:55] that's his ip [14:55] hop 9 is his interconnect /30 or whatever [14:56] 2 AS PATH as per NTT LG [14:56] 3356 3491 40193 25795 393949 [14:56] 12496 12496 12496 44684 393949 [14:56] staticsafe did mention he was trying Anycast? [14:57] the thing is it should be advertised to ntt [14:57] not via trit [14:57] maybe as well [14:57] so asn path should be shorter [14:57] is it like a convergence time for BGP? [14:58] nope [14:58] it's like routing policy mess [14:58] because bgp doesn't do such [14:58] well it could be - or it could be something simple like the route filters for export on arp didn't catch it properly because of beign 32bit asn instead of 16bit and doint translation [15:02] im going to send an email to Mythic Beasts asking if their filter configuration is complete [16:01] oh one of the other hosts changed now [16:01] ntt ! [16:01] oh hangon it's more complicated than that [16:01] it changed then it chagned back! [16:02] http://pastebin.com/dEN2E6S3 [16:03] ahh it looks like they shifted from ntt to gtt temp at one point [16:05] o_o [18:08] anyone who has their /48 IPv6 routed to them have any references to HOWTOs on how you set it up? I'm asking only because there's a customer that has requested this, and despite me insisting it is an "experts only" feature, he can't figure it out but still doesn't want to give up. i want to point him to some resources. [18:15] that seems doable, but I haven't done it. :) [18:26] up_the_irons: what OS? [18:28] mnathani_: CentOS [18:29] is this an IRC person? If so I can assist via IRC [18:29] I am running CentOS with a routed /48 [18:31] if not an IRC person - I can provide my config [18:35] https://gist.github.com/mnathani/27754bd2eb6cceefcc57 [18:35] Gist: "ARP Networks Routed /48 IPv6 configuration on CentOS 6" [18:39] brycec helped me out when configuring my IPv6, though his instructions were debian / ubuntu styled [18:46] mnathani_: awesome, thanks for that! [18:56] up_the_irons: You are welcome! Happy to help out. [18:57] :) [19:01] Back in 2013, I was the newbie asking the IPv6 questions. [19:06] 2013... so long ago. [19:22] @google define:bhyve [19:23] 3,970 total results returned for 'define:bhyve', here's 3 [19:23] 22.4. FreeBSD as a Host with bhyve (https://www.freebsd.org/doc/en/books/handbook/virtualization-host-bhyve.html) Starting with FreeBSD 10.0-RELEASE, the bhyve BSD -licensed hypervisor is part of the base system. This hypervisor supports a number of guests, including ... [19:23] bhyve - FreeBSD Wiki (https://wiki.freebsd.org/bhyve) Apr 18, 2015 ... A: bhyve supports Intel processors with Extended Page Tables. Processor EPT compatibility can be determined at ark.intel.com but most Atom ... [19:23] bhyve - BSD Hypervisor (http://bhyve.org/) About bhyve. bhyve, the "BSD hypervisor" is a hypervisor/virtual machine manager developed on FreeBSD and relies on modern CPU features such as ... [19:58] * staticsafe pings up_the_irons [20:30] @date Sat, Feb 5, 2011 [20:30] 4 years, 13 weeks, 2 days, 19 hours, 28 minutes, 41 seconds ago. [Interpreted date: Sat, 05 Feb 2011 00:00:00 -0800] [20:30] Thats how long I have been with ARP [20:43] @date Jan 14, 2011 [20:43] 4 years, 16 weeks, 3 days, 19 hours, 42 minutes, 1 second ago. [Interpreted date: Fri, 14 Jan 2011 00:00:00 -0800] [20:43] i beat you by 3 weeks :) [20:53] I kinda remember being drawn to ARP due to the FreeBSD and IPv6 support - both of which I had never worked with before [21:00] yeh ipv6 wasn't so common back then [21:10] Seen by #peers: 26 [21:10] up from 15 [21:17] I just compiled mtr from the git repo [21:17] and now all it says is Start with date [21:17] no trace output [21:17] weird [21:17] what's new in mtr in git? [21:17] arch has a git aur pkg i think [21:18] last release was 0.86 [21:18] not sure whats new in git [21:18] thought I would get the latest version [21:18] 0.86 isn't recent enough? [21:19] my version was .75 [21:19] ahh [21:19] arch has 0.86 ;) [21:19] trying to get newer version [21:19] I am running CentOS [21:19] ubuntu has 0.85 [21:19] ahh yeah [21:19] centos tends to be old [21:19] centos6? [21:19] 6 [21:19] yea [21:19] I must be missing something [21:19] its like I get a prompt to enter something [21:20] mtr 4.2.2.2 [21:20] Start: Sat May 9 00:17:07 2015 [21:20] did you enable curses? [21:20] dont think so [21:21] i dunno if it does by default or not [21:21] but i disable gtk [21:21] and if it's not showing anything.. [21:21] mtr --report google.com does work though [21:22] ipinfo lookup hmm [21:22] checking ncurses.h usability... no [21:22] checking ncurses.h presence... no [21:22] checking for ncurses.h... no [21:22] checking ncurses/curses.h usability... no [21:22] checking ncurses/curses.h presence... no [21:22] checking for ncurses/curses.h... no [21:22] checking curses.h usability... no [21:22] checking curses.h presence... no [21:22] checking for curses.h... no [21:22] checking cursesX.h usability... no [21:22] checking cursesX.h presence... no [21:23] ok that's your issue, install the curses dev package [21:23] hey i got the same thing on ubuntu [21:23] /except/ it shows lines 1 at a time [21:23] after big delay [21:23] yeh installing curses-dev fixed it on ubuntu [21:24] there we go [21:24] it should complain more if no curses [21:24] heh [21:24] what's this ipinfo thing [21:24] oh try -y [21:24] err -y IPINFO [21:24] it tells you the ASN's [21:25] it's in 0.85 too [21:26] y you mean during the output? [21:26] it gives me the block [21:27] mtr -y IPINFO 4.2.2.1 etc [21:27] I think hitting y does the same time [21:27] oh [21:27] repeatedly [21:27] switches the view [21:27] hitting y does ntohing for me normally [21:27] My traceroute [v0.86+git:592de82d] [21:28] mtr 0.86+git:592de82d [21:28] yeh same version [21:28] toggles between prefix, AS NUmber, Country, ARIN etc [21:28] yeh ? seems to suggest there is such an option [21:28] it just doesn't work for me [21:28] but mtr -y IPNFO does [21:28] are you in screen or something? [21:28] oh [21:28] I am in tmux and it works for me [21:29] if i use -y IPINFO then it works [21:29] cool [21:29] i mean y works if already doing -y IPINFO [21:29] juust not without [21:29] mtr -4z [21:29] weird i found some field which was usually a date code [21:29] I was in that option [21:29] but it's showing 3356 for level3 :/ [21:29] mtr -4z 4.2.2.2 [21:29] whh -z does work too [21:30] it's not in my man paeg though? [21:30] yhow did you figure that out? [21:30] I think you told me about that option a long time ago [21:31] heh [21:31] and then forgot about it? :) [21:31] i usually use traceroute -A [21:31] if i want to see asn's [21:32] 2014-07-09 20:19:03 m0unds mtr -z4 somev4host.domain.tld [21:32] it was actually m0unds [21:32] cool [21:32] 'cos i didn't remember that at all :) [21:35] hmm i'm playing with mtr -T now :) [21:37] what does that option do? [21:37] does a tcp traceroute [21:41] mtr seems to show high tcp pings for last hops [21:41] but tcptraceroute doesn't. [21:47] perhaps it uses a different port [21:47] that gets prioritized differently [21:48] yeh it could be [21:48] i haven't looked into it yet [21:49] that path changing stuff is real btw [21:49] you referring to the ntt stuff? [21:50] theres' heaps of load balancing that shows up easily with tcp but not icmp [21:50] when you trace nearly anywhere with mtr [21:50] level3 etc are bad too [21:50] how is load balancing bad? [21:50] it's not necessarily. [21:51] it just means you can have inconsistent performance [21:51] like i can ssh to the same host and have different latencies different times [21:51] that can be different by like 30 msec [21:51] which is noticable. [21:51] but bandwidth can vary too [21:51] right [22:27] how come the tmux that arch installs is so different than the one I get with centos or ubuntu? [22:44] mercutio: it depends on how often you're willing to update. between updates its very stable imo - but there's been some minor hiccups that "forces" me to update -- change to bootloader, the arc4random thing and so on. you need to track upstream (if you care) every now and then [22:55] so it's similar to tracking openbsd i suppose [22:55] i've found openbsd -current pretty stable except hiccups [22:56] the time thing was kind of annoying