[02:32] *** dne has joined #arpnetworks [04:19] *** BryceBot has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [04:20] *** BryceBot has joined #arpnetworks [05:22] *** Lucifer333 has joined #arpnetworks [05:47] *** Seji has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [05:47] *** eryc has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [05:48] *** Seji has joined #arpnetworks [05:49] *** eryc has joined #arpnetworks [05:49] *** eryc has quit IRC (Changing host) [05:49] *** eryc has joined #arpnetworks [06:54] *** qbit has quit IRC (Quit: WeeChat 1.5) [06:58] *** qbit has joined #arpnetworks [08:26] is there any tld I can use for a private network that icann has promised not to sell? [08:31] RFC 2606 says .test, .example, .invalid, .localhost. [08:31] .icannhaz, .icannsux, .icannworstever... [08:33] more seriously, I suppose you could look at what opennic has defined: http://wiki.opennicproject.org/OpenNICNamespaces , though I don't see a reason why icann couldn't sell colliding tlds someday [08:34] there's a rfc that says example, test, invalid, and localhost are reserved [08:34] I guess test is the best one [08:35] oh yeah mike-burns mentioned the rfc [09:56] *** mhoran has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 250 seconds) [09:57] *** sjackso has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 250 seconds) [09:57] *** KDE_Perry has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 250 seconds) [09:57] *** up_the_irons has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 250 seconds) [09:57] *** mhoran has joined #arpnetworks [09:57] *** KDE_Perry has joined #arpnetworks [09:57] *** sjackso has joined #arpnetworks [09:57] *** up_the_irons has joined #arpnetworks [09:57] *** ChanServ sets mode: +o up_the_irons [10:38] *** abthorpet is now known as tabthorpe [11:35] *** dne has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:35] *** mkb has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:35] *** CaZe has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:35] *** mkb has joined #arpnetworks [11:36] *** dne has joined #arpnetworks [11:36] *** CaZe has joined #arpnetworks [15:39] no localdomain? i think i saw some (mail-related?) application using localhost.localdomain when not configured. looks nice. [15:41] There's no guarantee that localdomain won't become a TLD in the future. [16:00] *** ziyourenxiang has quit IRC (Quit: Leaving) [16:01] what [16:02] could someone make a TLD called localdomain? [16:02] next you're going to say we should use the rest of 127.0.0.0/8 except 127.0.0.1/32 as we're running out of ip addresses [16:37] IPv6 seems super laggy right now? [17:13] Yeah, IPv6 is totally busted. [17:32] what's it doing mhoran ? [17:35] Seems better now, but it was unusable from home via ssh (just super laggy typing in weechat) and also weechat was showing 12 second lag to freenode. [17:35] ahh. did it last long? [17:36] maybe 30min. [17:43] *** caseyandgina has joined #arpnetworks [17:44] When building a custom kernel for a linux VM, is it ideal to use the No-Op I/O scheduler, which in theory should just leave everything up to the host I/O scheduler and not double-complicate things? [17:44] deadline gives pretty similar performance tbh [17:45] but no-op vs deadline vs cfq is minor [17:45] cfq has some advantages if you want to make use of it's advanced features [17:45] usually people who test these things just do a single user doing read/write etc... when disk performance more matters under higher load [17:45] which is much harder to test.. [18:00] hmm [18:09] Looks like EFI could be useful, for building a simpler kernel that uses ACPI "Reduced Hardware" mode. https://wiki.linaro.org/LEG/Engineering/Kernel/ACPI/AcpiReducedHw [18:10] I will give it a try regardless ;) [18:44] let us know how it goes :) [18:49] how does 95th percentile billing work for bandwidth? Stats has never been one of my strong suites [18:52] wikipedia describes it [18:53] samples are taken periodically (say, every 5 minutes), and the top 5% are thrown away, what is left is what you're billed for (that is, the 95th percentile) [18:53] this makes it so one can burst, and not be penalized, for the most part [18:53] you can burst quite a lot [18:54] in a month, that's 36 available hours that are not "tracked", so-to-speak [18:54] but if you leave bittorrent seeding at 100 megabit for 2 days then you get charged for 100 megabit [19:06] right :) [19:21] *** caseyandgina has quit IRC (Quit: Lost terminal) [20:28] *** Lucifer333 has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 256 seconds) [20:41] whats the relation between monthly transfer and percentile, or does it only matter how much of the time you burst and not your actual monthly transfer? [20:42] * nathani heads over to wikipedia for more info [20:54] *** Lucifer333 has joined #arpnetworks [21:08] brycec: your backlit keyboard looks really cool [22:56] it's only how much you burst [22:56] but you can only burst as fast as you can transfer [22:57] so you might be able to do say 500 megabit for 4% of the time and 5 megabit the rest of the time [22:57] and it's still accounted for as 500 megabi [23:02] nathani: no relation, they measure different things. one is speed, the other is quantity.