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<@¿@>/ anisfarhana: What language is that? mnathani: Who said anything about it being a langauge? anisfarhana: Ok it must be a symbol then? ***: _mnathani_ has joined #arpnetworks
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Eleven_Cool has joined #arpnetworks Eleven_Cool: I just got a 2nd static IP but I need to keep DHCP on my router. I either need a second router to act as a switch or an actual switch to split the IPs. Can anyone advise me of any particular models that would work well? milki: as a consumer, i think they all do the same thing -.- Eleven_Cool: Well one switch I found says its specially configured for streaming while most others don't, some have priority and some don't
And although a router could work, I've read that an actual switch is better and cheaper. ***: jlgaddis has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 252 seconds)
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jlgaddis has joined #arpnetworks CaZe: What sort of network is it for? Eleven_Cool: One server is a web server and another server is for a streaming server. Also, there is a DHCP pool for internal devices (one device NEEDS DHCP, so shutting it off and requireing static IPs from all devices isn't an option) milki: router doesnt do static dhcp leases?
hm
or dmz? Eleven_Cool: The router is doing both a DHCP (99 devices) and also 2 static
Although I'd like to keep at least one server on the DHCP router with a static, the other can optionally be moved to the new switch
server2 is the streaming server that I don't mind optionally moving to the switch, and may actually be better if the switch has priority so I can set it to top priority
Would this one work even with my streaming server? It doesn't do priority, should I try to find one that does? http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16833122128&Tpk=GS105 CaZe: You could also consider a VLAN. Eleven_Cool: CaZe: VLAN looks cool, ty
The only priority switches I can find are those for TV streaming, console gaming, etc.. and not really targeted towards internet streaming. I like the idea of giving my streaming server some kind of priority to help keep the web server from slowing it down too much, but I can't seem to find that option on business grade switches brycec: May I suggest moving all of your serving needs to an ARP VPS? ;p
(^obligatory on-topic message) Eleven_Cool: I just bought some pretty awesome servers so I've gotta respectfully decline that offer :)
OK I went with this one: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16833122111
And it does VLAN by default, so I can just put all the servers right on the switch for some speed ups. yay, ty everyone who helped CaZe: I have that.
I didn't know it did VLANing. brycec: I don't see that it does tagging, but I'm sure it supports VLANs. (I haven't seen a switch in the last 10 years that didn't at least support, a.k.a. pass vlan-tagged packets through) Eleven_Cool: It does do tagging too. You can search the comments on newegg
I saw that it does VLAN when looking at the product details on the Netgear product page up_the_irons: nixbag: dang, the 8 drives you helped me package up are already at HGST (i dropped 'em off at fedex yesterday) Eleven_Cool: Actually it indeed does NOT support VLAN
I canceled it and went with this one instead: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16833122345 mercutio: you need the T in the model i think eleven
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16833122381
like that
dude that second one is 100 megabit
get the gs108t
i was thinking of getting gs108t myself, because i wanted vlans and bonding
and it's the cheapest switch that'll do those two, but they're so overpriced here toddf: whatever you do do _not_ get the gs108e .. can only admin it from a windows binary. the others have a different ui that is easy to admin from a unix web browser. mercutio: ho hmm toddf: (speaking from personal experience) mercutio: gs108t is safe?
or you think it's safe? toddf: what I know is this mercutio: i hate netgear, really i do
but there aren't many cheap choices toddf: GS108E is what I have and it does not permit web only admin mercutio: err i want telnet admin :) toddf: GS108?? that has POE is like $20 more and does permit web admin
if you want telnet admin you're looking at the wrong vendor mercutio: gs108t doesn't have poe, maybe a diff one
heh
i suppose web would do, but doesn't even edimax have telnet? :/
original version had telnet and HTTP admin access. Since 3.x firmware, just web administration. Actually, there’s 2 web servers in firmware: one in the Netgear firmware, and another in the Broadcom “loader” firmware fail-safe mode.
it seems older gs108t firmware has telnet toddf: ah nice mercutio: from memory gs108t had a newer hw version with lower power use
that may need newer firmware
like gs108t also doesn't need fan which is requirement of a switch for me toddf: wonder if newer firmware for my GS108E would give me telnet and/or non windows binary for admin mercutio: you need older firmware probably
oh for web
you may be able to do neewr toddf: I'll have to put it on my worklist and get to it later but 'duh try upgrading firmware if current firmware doesnt do what you want' makes perfect sense ;-)
random shout out for how my worklist gets queued btw: https://github.com/toddfries/xtomato mercutio: firmware dl doesn't work for me
"something went wrong"
hmm
maybe i should try something like that
do you use a timer/? toddf: the program is a shellscript that drives xmessage with a timeout mercutio: oh cool. toddf: it can say 'work' 'break' etc mercutio: The creator and others encourage a low-tech approach using a mechanical timer, paper and pencil. The physical act of winding up the timer confirms the user's determination to start the task; ticking externalises desire to complete the task; ringing announces a break. Flow and focus become associated with these physical stimuli toddf: and if you give it your worklist (documented in the README) it will tell you what to work on mercutio: yeh i need to get linux going first :/ Eleven_Cool: thank you mercutio, I just saw that it did VLAN and got 5 stars, not that it was only 100, I'm so glad you pointed that out! toddf: maybe if you use another os cygwin can run shellcode and xmessage but anyway. I do have a sound associated with ending of the task mercutio: cygwin is gross
i just use putty mostly
i tried doing remote X it wasn't working out so well on windows
i do have a plan anyway
vt-d :/
and swap to other computer and do pass trhough of video card to windows toddf: you may wish to checkout proxmox.com (free iso download, more functional than free vmware by a longshot)
just setup a kvm system mercutio: nah
does kvm do vt-d?
i was thinking of xen
but i'm easy toddf: kvm is virtualization like vmware and xen Eleven_Cool: Putty is awesome :) mercutio: yeh
but i need vt-d hardware passthrough toddf: kvm is the 'real hardware simulator' that arpnetworks is using mercutio: so windows can get my video card
and then linux can get hd4000
actually
that's still going to be a pita
gah! Eleven_Cool: I like Parallels best, but they aren't free toddf: http://forum.proxmox.com/archive/index.php/t-6120.html
I'd rather let windows relegate itself to running binary blobs as vendors have their head stuck in the sand. for everything else there is freedom. mercutio: i'd rather not use weird tools if necessary toddf: so personally I have no need to do such uglies. mercutio: there's no freedom for ati toddf :/
that is my main issue
hd 7000 isn't supported properly with open source video drivers toddf: vga1 at pci1 dev 5 function 0 "ATI Radeon XPRESS 200M" rev 0x00 mercutio: yeh that's old
old stuff works
and better than nvidia old stuff toddf: I get to use 'dated' hardware that is cheaper and well supported. fits my budget and computing style! mercutio: and i915 etc were terrible
i was a bit slow to pcikup on intel hd working best with open soruce drivers these days
heh
i used radeon 9000 for ages
that worked in openbsd even toddf: my wife uses this vga1 at pci0 dev 2 function 0 "Intel 82915GM Video" rev 0x04 mercutio: you're doing dual head on one computer? toddf: openbsd is typically not the limiting factor for open source drivers, it is X mercutio: toddf: that video will be terrible
hmm, i had issues with vmware and openbsd video drivers nixbag: up_the_irons: yeah there were a bunch of hitachi ones. mercutio: it worked better on linux toddf: I have one laptop my wife has a netbook, why would I share a computer with my wife in that way? ewww... ;-) nixbag: up_the_irons: but those were all individually boxed. mercutio: heh
well one said pci0 one said pci1
oh they both said vga1
duh
netbooks are slow toddf: mercutio: why is video such a big deal? I need it to display xterms and the occasional webpage with text. graphics? well, nice, but .. fancy graphics are for eyecandy youngsters .. *grin* mercutio: so 915 isn't only issue
toddf: i have 2560x1440 resolution
that'll drag down older video cards with simple things like scrolling up_the_irons: nixbag: yeah, Hitachi = HGST toddf: 1920x1080 but thats only because thats what this monitor is limiting me to mercutio: toddf: i915 struggles ate 1280x10245
1280x1024 nixbag: up_the_irons: thats so fast. up_the_irons: nixbag: i know, srsly toddf: mercutio: we are obviously looking for two different standards of 'working' mercutio: i dunno how it fares with netbooks
toddf: fluid scrolling is a huge thing to me :)
most onboard used to have huge issues with scrolling
because they have to read from memory / write to memory toddf: sure if I go back to my 300mhz system with a trident pci vga card, I notice scrolling speeds, or if I dare sign into x on my sparc tadpole laptops, but .. what I am staring it now is 'very snappy indeed' until I try to load e.g. celestia or stellarium mercutio: and memory throughput is shared.
err memory bandwidth
heh
oh god i hated how slow text mode was on sparcs
well console i mean toddf: X != console text mercutio: it was slightly better with terminals
but like as soon as you had a big window and scrolled th ewhole thing
was insanely slow toddf: OpenBSD specifically went to progress bars instead of listing every file as i twas extracting for the sparc install speed ;-) mercutio: haha
i installed openbsd on sparc
this is where i found console slow :/
ssh key generation was slow too toddf: second only to vax mercutio: xterm has some hacks to fix scrolling speed on slow computesr i think toddf: jumpscroll mercutio: yeah it worked quite well
back when i used to use openbsd with many xterms my main problem was running out of ptys
on older hardware
i think you can open like 40 xterms toddf: pty problems are a thing of the past (if you 'cd /dev; sh ./MAKEDEV pty{1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,...} mercutio: this was like 10 years ago toddf: I can now open over 200 mercutio: i'm glad to hear that's improved now toddf: but one must bump login.conf limits otherwise its like 120 mercutio: it was definitely not as high as 120
i used to do ps auxw | grep xterm | wc -l toddf: X itself has a hardcoded FD limit .. I think it got bumped to 512 recently up_the_irons: i still have openbsd 2.6 on a microSPARC laptop mercutio: curiously up_the_irons: i used to use it for IRC :) mercutio: i also played with time xterm -e pwd toddf: up_the_irons: time to update? mercutio: i think it was -e
and ocmpared to linux
and openbsd actually executed pwd in xterm faster than linux up_the_irons: toddf: no need, it runs IRC to my satisfaction
fvwm2 rocks on it mercutio: up_the_irons: you still use it? :)
i started on 2.<something> i think
whatever was current in late 2000 i think
i tried solaris, openbsd, freebsd, netbsd, and debian
netbsd used the least ram
solaris had the most confusing isntall
and most memory use
went with freebsd in the end
then it corrupted my disks
and found openbsd as a desktop works surprisingly well
once you get over things like not doing X by default etc
it's actually quite simple to setup
especially if you know what window manager you want to use, what applications you want to use, and nwo there are lots of packages.
and back then linux emulation let you run things like opera too
bah now i want to see if openbsd will do hd7000 video ***: vxla has joined #arpnetworks mercutio: actually it'd probably spin fan at full speed
toddf: do you know if openbsd runs under kvm for video ok? up_the_irons: mercutio: it's in my closet, haven't powered it on in a while mercutio: my laptop has windows heh
no real reason
it'll actually be ok for hardware support probably cos it's so old toddf: mercutio: what video would you be doing on openbsd under kvm?
mercutio: kvm itself can present vmware or cirrus or generic vga iirc, I'm sure you could get an X thing going if you wanted to mercutio: hmm
oh it can pressent vmware toddf: I'd personally find 'vncserver' a better option if I were wanting graphics from a virtualized OpenBSD system mercutio: maybe vmware isn't so bad if you don't want to have non fullscreen
vnc was terrible :) toddf: what would you be doing with graphics on a virtualized openbsd system again? mercutio: i want non windows desktop sometimes :) toddf: just use openbsd natively and use rdesktop in fullscreen mercutio: yeh but natively openbsd won't be able to run on radeon hd7850 i think
without running fan at full speed toddf: modern rdesktop can even export filesystems and clipboard and you can even hear sound over rdesktop connections on your openbsd powered speakers mercutio: i need good video card for agmes on windows :)
but i'm not completely against rebooting
esp if reboots are fast toddf: ah so you are a gamer. 'nuff said. no hope for me to help you. ;-) mercutio: i only play starcraft :/
meh toddf: just play konquest in openbsd and get some logic and mental exercise from the experience ;-) mercutio: never heard of it
i used to play kpat toddf: http://games.kde.org/game.php?game=konquest mercutio: oh
i think i've seen non kde version of this game
like dos version it hink
was it called galactic conquest or osmeting
can't find what it's based on toddf: This the KDE version of Gnu-Lactic Konquest ***: HighJinx has quit IRC ()
Eleven_Cool has quit IRC () up_the_irons: i wonder if a $5 vps with 128MB RAM would be useful... jbergstroem: up_the_irons: secondary mx perhaps?
dns up_the_irons: yeah
i was thinking dns jbergstroem: wouldn't run ubuntu on it, perhaps :)
if you even get to upstart/systemd that's an achievement up_the_irons: haha toddf: up_the_irons: i would have started with that instead of the $10 .. seriously, it would be useful for those shopping around to test arpnetworks for hw compatibility of their favorite os
i regularly use 64mb qemu instances at my office for random testing up_the_irons: wow, that's small toddf: when host os has 768mb and it is a desktop...
someday i will up the host milki: someday toddf: seriously though, i think people might in one narrow view see a $5 vps and look for cheapest everywhere and realize arpnetworks is an awesome deal for that ***: perun_ has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 248 seconds) toddf: one more way to get people in, and once in, get hooked easily... ***: toddf has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 264 seconds)
perun_ has joined #arpnetworks mercutio: ubuntu struggles with 256mb
but you can make it work
my main concern about $5 vps is people come just to ddos others or something
but i imagine if it's on a seperate node or such
or rate limited it shouldn't be a big issue
the other issue is low ram can swap all the time ***: HighJinx has joined #arpnetworks brycec: up_the_irons: I would be interested in a $5/mo VPS.
In fact, I'd probably break apart my VPS into its services and tasks up_the_irons: i c brycec: I prefer to have service-dedicated VM's
But paying $15-$30/mo for a single VM/VPS, I end up piling a bunch of things into it.
(and then if I tank something, or if the host machine tanks, a whole bunch of services end up affected)
fwiw I build low-RAM VMs all the time at work. I hate wasting RAM. e.g. Why go with 128M if 96M will do...
My concern with a $5 VPS is that, at that price, the host machine ends up losing money - too many of its guests are the $5. (I don't think I'm explaining that clearly, I'm sorry). But then, I don't know what it costs to run ARP.
The other risk, of course, is that users wil downgrade their VPS... but I wouldn't expect any sizable portion of users to do so.
Anyways...
up_the_irons: if you introduce a $5, you can count me as a day-1 customer up_the_irons: brycec: roger brycec: *a $5 VPS with 128M RAM and 5GB disk up_the_irons: yeah that was what i was thinking brycec: I wonder if the cost of an ipv4 address becomes too much? Maybe the $5 VPS is ipv6-only, or +$1 for ipv4
Welp, -: brycec punches the clock and heads home to the missus
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dj_goku has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 256 seconds) CaZe: Hmm. -: CaZe has 133 MB free out of 256MB mikeputnam: out of 768MB i've got: Memory: Real: 126M/317M act/tot Free: 428M Cache: 139M Swap: 0K/745M CaZe: I'm sure there're slimmed down builds of the OpenBSD kernel floating around, too.
GENERIC takes up around 30 MB. mercutio: mike: on openbsd?
you can bump kern.bufcachepercent up ***: toddf has joined #arpnetworks
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