#arpnetworks 2013-12-31,Tue

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WhoWhatWhen
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up_the_ironsmercutio: still, i'm surprised the "engineer" hasn't heard of it from others; he must be new [03:07]
mercutioi dunno i don't have high expectations
i hardly expect "engineers" to understand mtu
i think the problem is that these days a lot of people do courses and cram study and forget huge amounts of stuff
[03:09]
up_the_ironsi would hope they would understand MTU... if not, what makes them even qualified for the job? [03:10]
mercutioccna? :)
knowing subnet maths
[03:10]
up_the_ironsi guess i haven't look at it that way... someone off the street, knowing nothing, gets CCNA, then gets a network engineer job? they still seem underqualified if they only got the CCNA
wow, don't visit #freenode-newyears
(i warned you)
up_the_irons wanders off
[03:12]
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mercutioyeah you've been around a bit long
it changed :)
or you're lucky
and it's not like that over there so much
[03:36]
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apparently ccna does cover mtu a bit
although it seems to suggest that routers do fragmentation
[03:53]
anti can't remember hearing about mtu in icnd1 or icnd2
oh..there it is
one more thing i forgot
[03:55]
mercutiowhat's icnd?
oh another name for ccna?
ant: would you call yourself a network engineer?
tbh, i dunno how people are meant to learn the vast amounts of stuff that's relevant these days
i still don't know much about node.js etc
[04:08]
BryceBotBAREMETAL!!! [04:11]
mercutioand apparently it's really big these days
mercutio wonders what made byrcebot say that
[04:11]
antmercutio: icnd (interconnecting cisco networking devices) 1 and 2 are the courses which prepare for the ccna exam
mercutio: and i don't have a clue what "network engineer" would even mean
[04:14]
mercutioheh [04:15]
antbtw. i think "node.js" triggers BryceBot [04:15]
BryceBotBAREMETAL!!! [04:15]
mercutioi was looking up systems engineer before [04:16]
antnode.js [04:16]
BryceBotBAREMETAL!!! [04:16]
mercutioapparently sys engineer > sys admin
i've always considered myself a sys admin
but apparently sys admin now means someone who looks at graphs
whereas systems engineer implements things
so i assume network engineer is someone who implements networks
i assume network technician is what they call someone that responds to trouble tickets
it all gets pretty confusing really
oh hmm, node.js isn't a baremetal thing though
[04:16]
BryceBotBAREMETAL!!! [04:18]
antwell, there are some titles which are backed by certificates, like ccna/ccnp/rhce/..., so there one can assume some (minimal) knowledge. but apart from that i can call myself whatever i want [04:20]
mercutioime ccna doesn't seem to many anything
ccnp is slightly significant though
[04:21]
antyeah. you don't need to know much to get an ccna [04:21]
mercutioand visa versa
not having it doesn't really mean you don't know things
[04:21]
antand there are also "leaked" exam questions which you can learn by hard... [04:21]
mercutiosome companies like juniper or cisco certifications though
even if they only use one of them
just like some places like university degrees in any field
i think it just proves you have a bit of commitment
[04:22]
antimo the icna courses are also quite good to get some basic networking knowledge [04:23]
ziyourenxiangactually, according to corporate lore, that's just for HR to filter the CVs. [04:23]
mercutioheh
i must admit i don't have much experience in such areas
but from what i've heard most jobs gets heaps of applicants
and certifications like ccna are pretty comon
but experience not so much
[04:24]
ziyourenxiangCCIEs are supposed to be the prized ones. [04:25]
antto become a ccie you actually need to know stuff and have the experience [04:27]
GluffiSohh yes
CCIE exams are 'a bit' more complicated :D
[04:31]
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antmercutio: isn't it true for ipv4 that routers do fragmentation? [04:37]
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antmercutio: or did you mean that modern implementations use pmtu discovery und thus the routers don't have much to fragment?
ant is now reading http://stack.nil.com/ipcorner/IP_Fragmentation/
[04:52]
GluffiSip pmtu does not always work, and is not possible on udp
pmtud even
[04:56]
antaccording to the link i posted it depends on the application for udp [04:57]
GluffiSwell, yes but the routers will never do it [04:58]
robonerdcan someone here with js disabled in their browser check out www.coindev.org and tell me what the bottom left bitcoin donate button does? [04:59]
antGluffiS: isn't pmtud always done by the host? [05:00]
GluffiSno
routers can do it also, to determine if fragmentation is needed
but I would not trust pmtud :D
[05:00]
mercutioexacvtly [05:01]
GluffiSat least cisco routers has options for pmtud :D
better to keep track of your mtu :)
GluffiS normally builds small networks :D
[05:01]
mercutioi'd like to see internet mtus go above 1.5k [05:04]
antnetworks can't be too small to have mtu related problems..i remember having them at home [05:04]
mercutioyeh adsl and cable networks it's common with
dialup it was too
and vpns
mss clamping is well known now but it didn't used to be
[05:05]
GluffiStunneling over mpls networks is horrible :D [05:05]
mercutiompls networks usually have jumbo frames or baby jumbo frames and so you're usually fine
over the internet is a different story
[05:06]
GluffiStrue...
my work is mainly off internet ;)
[05:06]
mercutioare you doing mpls over the internet?
or do you have mpls connections provdided by someone else?
i love it how this channel is off topic so much
but generally when people have an issue someone will pay attention to them, and even then it's not that often
[05:06]
GluffiSmpls providede by someone else :D [05:08]
mercutioGluffiS: yeh so they'll have jumbo or baby jumbo frames on their network
and give you 1500 mtu, right?
[05:09]
GluffiSwell, my findings told me that somewhere arounde 1300 was the way to go for that system :) [05:09]
mercutiooh what
how lame :/
[05:10]
GluffiShehe :D [05:10]
mercutiol2tp over the internet is around there somewhere i think
using udp
ie the old l2tp not the new one
[05:11]
GluffiSl2tp v3 is nice [05:11]
mercutiov2 is more common [05:12]
GluffiSprobably, but v3 has nice qos options... [05:12]
mercutiohuh [05:12]
GluffiSit can copy , at least on cisco, the dscp value from the orginal packet to the tunnled packet :D [05:13]
mercutiowell that's not a feature of l2tp but an implementation detail [05:14]
GluffiSprobably :D [05:15]
mercutioopenbsd is gaining l2tp support
but that's one of the areas that lags behind in open source / unix platforms.
[05:15]
GluffiSi'm no network guru... mainly dabble around with networking, firewalls, voip and stuff
OpenBSD and networking is awesome :D
their vrf implementation is really nice
[05:16]
mercutiomostly
they need better vrf support :/
haha
well i had a play with it
[05:16]
GluffiSwell, compare it to Linux :) [05:17]
mercutioheh yeah
i want to see openbgpd get more efficient
but i really like openbgpd
but for some reason cisco is way quicker at loading bgp tables
someone benchmarked it
and cisco was beating openbgpd on much lower end cpus
[05:17]
GluffiSwell, cisco does BGP for a living :D [05:19]
mercutiothat was when used as route server
yeah
but cpu sppeed is way faster
so it should be possible to speed it up
[05:19]
GluffiSyes, they will get there :D [05:19]
mercutioi believe that to be true
how far did you get with vrfs on openbsd btw?
i was struggling to get it working right with bgp
[05:20]
GluffiSi did not do anything fancy , needed a lot of diffrerent networks for some firewall migration [05:21]
mercutiohttps://www.ams-ix.net/downloads/ams-ix-route-server-implementations-performance.pdf
thjis is what i saw about cisco being faster with converging than openbgpd
[05:29]
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GluffiSok
well, a ASR cisco box is expensive as hell :D
[05:30]
mercutioit's still a slower cpu [05:33]
GluffiSyes
but they have spent a couple of millions in devloping the software :D
[05:33]
mercutioheh
well it still means it's possible to get more efficient
[05:33]
GluffiSabsolutley [05:33]
mercutiowhich is what counts really [05:34]
GluffiSyou can never solve bad code with hardware [05:34]
mercutiolike when people talk about making a faster web server
it's like static web pages go at line rate on modern hardware
with whatever server
heh yeah to a point
but yeah algorithams matter
but there are limits
on that note, intel have made zlib faster apparently
[05:34]
GluffiSnice [05:35]
mercutio(by using more cpu instructions)
but for some reason no-one was trying to make zlib faster it seemed
even though it's damn coommonn anod bottlenecks easily
lbzip2/pbzip2 are actually faster than gzip on modern cpus
cos they parallelise
[05:35]
GluffiShehe yes... paralelling is cruicial these days [05:36]
mercutiowell with low compression values
that still compresses better than zlib
yeah
that's where openbsd needs to catch up :)
and get rid of their giaint lock
i imagine some of what makes openbgpd slower is interacting with the kernel
[05:36]
GluffiSopenbsd has nerver been fast ;) [05:37]
ziyourenxiangfast, secure, cheap - choose two. :-) [05:37]
GluffiSit's usuually just one :) [05:39]
mercutioheh
openbsd is pretty fast for UP stuff really
[05:41]
GluffiSi acutually had a beer with Theo Da Raadt 10 yeras ago or so :D [05:47]
mercutiowhat was he like [05:47]
GluffiSwell, regular nerd :) a bit nerdier than most [05:48]
mercutiohe seems like he has the right attitude towards things in a way to me [05:48]
GluffiSyes [05:48]
mercutiounlike rms etc :/
yeah omg
[05:48]
GluffiSstallman feels like more of a clown [05:48]
mercutiolooking at openbsd hackathon photos makes me feel less geeky :/ [05:48]
GluffiShehe [05:48]
mercutioi've met rms heh
i didn't stick around though
he wasn't very interesting
[05:48]
GluffiSthere were a discussion regarding bugfixing on that event and Alan Cox asked why Theo did not use the built in debugger in GCC, 'It to slow, its faster to just read the 180mb of code, then you might find something else to fix' [05:50]
mercutiohaha
i hated gcc's debugger when i first tried it
i ended up just using printf :/
[05:50]
GluffiShehe [05:50]
mercutiobut then i used it for backtraces [05:51]
GluffiShavn't written C since school :P [05:51]
mercutioi haven't done much C recently
trying to get back into it
[05:51]
GluffiSwell, I fixed some kernel stuff ages ago when struggeling with the nvidia drivers :D [05:51]
mercutiocool [05:52]
GluffiSnever submitted the patch though [05:52]
mercutioi know how that is
i fixed s/pdif on audio driver on openbsd
err added s/pdif support
but never submitted anything
[05:52]
GluffiS:D [05:52]
mercutiofor cmi8738
i just wanted to be able to listen to music
[05:52]
GluffiSthis happened on a friday evening with a lot of cursing [05:52]
mercutioi ended up taking code from netbsd
iirc
and i was surprised i managed to do it :)
[05:53]
GluffiShehe [05:53]
mercutiohmm i added higher initcwnd support to openbsd before it wsa implemented too
but that was pretty easy
[05:54]
GluffiShehe [05:54]
mercutioand reduced the initial retransmit timeout
hmm i wonder if openbsd has decreased that yet
linux has now
for some reason people pay more attention to the initial window size thing, when both of them were proposed by google at around the same time
basically normally there's a 3 second timeout in retransmits in initial packets
and it can be safely decreased to 1 second these days
saving a couple of seconds
easy to reproduce with 5% packet loss
[05:55]
GluffiS:D [05:56]
mercutioand the difference can be noticable
it only matters when you have packet loss in the beginning of connections though
[05:56]
GluffiSand no one really cares :D [05:57]
mercutioi dunno, dsl networks here had 5 to 15% packet lsos for a while
that's how i got interested
i dunno how common it is
i imagine it's still common in places like india
and happens on some wifi connectinos at long distance
[05:57]
GluffiSpeople with dlink wifi equipment is probably interested
must be the crappiest piece of network hardware I ever bought
[06:01]
mercutiothere's actually more stuff that can be improved for wireless networks
normal tcp/ip congestion control doesn't work that well with the variable latency variance of wifi
freebsd's got a new algoritham that's meant to work better in such situations but i haven't tested what it's like for wifi yet
CAIA Delay-Gradient (CDG) congestion control
algorithm
[06:01]
GluffiSas soon as I get some cabling to the other side of the house I will literally set my dlink AP on fire [06:03]
mercutioahh this is it
that bad is it?
[06:03]
GluffiSyes [06:04]
mercutioyou've set it to 20 mhz already? [06:04]
GluffiSuse it as bridge [06:04]
mercutioi bridge for my wifi too [06:04]
GluffiScisco 1142 in the other end :D the dlink just dies and has to be restarted [06:05]
mercutiooh
you mean you have a bridge off it
[06:05]
GluffiSit just stops forwarding packets
yes
[06:05]
mercutiohave you tried openwrt on it? [06:05]
GluffiSit cant :(
1360 DAP
[06:05]
mercutioi had a d-link 504t adsl modem
everywehere says they're crap
was real stable on openwrt
[06:05]
GluffiSjust need a drill and some rj45 contacts :D [06:06]
mercutioone of the few adsl modems supported for adsl in openwrt [06:06]
GluffiSok [06:06]
mercutioa bit old now though
the cpu can't keep up with adsl > 16 mbit
[06:06]
ziyourenxiangyou mean freebsd has such good coverage of wifi drivers that they dream up algorithms to optimize tcp/ip over wifi? :-) [06:06]
GluffiSi am thinkg of getting me a dsl wic for my 1841 router :D [06:07]
mercutioziy: it'll help a freebsd web server send to an end user on wifi too [06:07]
ziyourenxiangah. [06:07]
mercutioi have no idea what freebsd is like for wifi [06:07]
ziyourenxiangziyourenxiang would love to run freebsd on his netbook. [06:07]
mercutioi only came across it cos i was wondering what was new in freebsd 10
but it's actually in freebsd 9.2 too
i'm using a tp-link wireless router with openwrt
but it's bridging rather than doing anything
just between wifi and ethernet
and my normal linux box runs the dhcp server etc
well in theory
iv'e acutally stopped using wifi
[06:08]
GluffiSGluffiS is happy with his 1142 AP, it can do 40mhz also :D [06:10]
mercutio3g works well enough on my cellphone
20 mhz is often more stable than 40 mhz
depending on how crowded your area is
it seems pretty common to have wifi issues these days though
and i'd rather see everyone shift to 20 mhz
[06:10]
GluffiSit's not crowded...
closest neighbour is 100m away
[06:11]
mercutiooh you live rural ok [06:11]
GluffiSyes, crappy phone wires though, get 8mbit dsl only [06:12]
mercutiodamn
can you get two adsl connections and bond them?
[06:12]
GluffiSnope [06:12]
mercutiosingle line to the house?
is it adsl1 or adsl2+ at 8 mbit?
[06:12]
GluffiSwell, I guess I can get 12-18mbit on my line acutally
2+
[06:13]
mercutioahh ok
12 mbit is ok
[06:13]
GluffiSmy ISP refuses to deliver vdsl :D [06:13]
mercutiohow come? [06:13]
GluffiSthey haven't upgraded the dslam yet [06:14]
mercutioyou may not get much more downstream, but you'd get more upstream at least
ahh
here having vdsl available means fibre fed
[06:14]
GluffiSahh [06:15]
mercutionot having vdsl available means it could still be atm fed
and atm fed can mean congestion
[06:15]
GluffiSfibre here is 10Mbps ethernet as slowest :D [06:15]
mercutiofibre to the dslam i mean [06:15]
GluffiSahh
the dlsam is fibre :D
[06:15]
mercutioso having a vdsl capable exchange is good
well that's a good start
just they have no vdsl line cards?
[06:16]
GluffiSGluffiS is in sweden, fibre is almost everywhere [06:16]
mercutiosee if you can get some other people in the area to put in requests for vdsl [06:16]
GluffiSyes :D [06:16]
mercutioi'm in new zealand [06:17]
GluffiShh [06:17]
ziyourenxiangmercutio, happy new year :-) [06:17]
mercutioa long long way way :/
haha
yes it's 2014 here :/
not that it makes any diff to me
i didn't een get drunk :/
sweden has good net speeds right?
[06:17]
GluffiSyes
if you live in the city 100Mbps is not uncommon :d
[06:19]
mercutioheh
is it gpon?
[06:20]
GluffiSsome ISP's even offer gig :D
nope, copper usually
[06:20]
mercutiooh curious
is this like apartments?
[06:21]
GluffiSbut fibre is coming, mostly to new villas
yep
[06:21]
mercutioapparently sweden is using something called AON
which i've never heard of
it may be dated though
[06:21]
GluffiSdon't think it's that widespread [06:22]
mercutioi think gpon is taking off [06:23]
GluffiSyes [06:23]
mercutioCAIA Delay-Gradient (CDG) congestion control
algorithm
oops
http://www.swedentelecom.com/solutions/fttx-gpon/
looks lie one isp is doing gpon at least
and that's curious, it came up in english :)
and they doing hardware nat
cool.
current routers are going to struggle with gigabit speeds
[06:23]
GluffiSyes... biggest ISP is still Telia, TSIC :D
TSIC are tier1 :D
[06:25]
mercutioi've heard of telia [06:25]
GluffiSthey are huge [06:26]
mercutioso yeah they must be big
cos i don't hear much about sweden
but they're all blonde over there right?
[06:26]
ziyourenxiangabba wasn't all blonde :-) [06:27]
GluffiShaha yes
they are doing stupid stuff like selling voip over adsl :)
[06:27]
mercutiowhat's stupid about that? [06:28]
GluffiSwhich is interesting when you pay for POTS [06:28]
mercutiovoip has some advantages over pots anyway [06:28]
GluffiSno
it hasn't
[06:28]
mercutioyes, it does. [06:28]
GluffiSvoip is crap :D [06:28]
mercutiocan be crap [06:28]
GluffiSPOTS always works [06:29]
mercutioi dunno my phone line been having issues :/
not mine
[06:29]
GluffiShere it does [06:29]
mercutiomy line been crackling
and i've had it somewhere else before
and my parents had it once
if your line crackles too bad it can go off hook randomly
and then you can't receive phone calls
the weird thing is my dsl is stable
[06:29]
GluffiSwell, when they teard down the phoneline with a woodcutting machine it went dead [06:29]
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[06:30]
GluffiSelse , it always works [06:30]
mercutiobut yeah overall pots is still more reliable than voip
ersp. with regards to power outages etc
[06:30]
GluffiSeven in powerouttakes :D [06:30]
mercutiowell as long as you plug in a legacy phone :/ [06:30]
GluffiSvoip over 3g is horrible :D [06:30]
mercutioin the dark [06:30]
GluffiSyes [06:31]
mercutioi've done voip over 3g
it was ok
[06:31]
GluffiSit works...
modem over voip also kinda works
[06:31]
mercutioit depends on the jitter of the provider
but i was doing it with 80 msec ping
[06:31]
GluffiS:E [06:31]
mercutioon 3g [06:31]
GluffiSi would never pay for voip over adsl :D [06:31]
mercutiowhy not i used to do it
but i use an alternatve voip provider
and it had cheaper phone calls
[06:32]
GluffiSwell, I still have to pay for copper [06:32]
mercutionow i seem to get good value out of cellphone :/
it used to be you could cut the cost of ringing cellphones down heaps here by using voip
[06:32]
GluffiSok [06:32]
mercutiobut now can get 120 minutes or something
of mixed minutes from cellphone
we used to pay 79cents/minute for cellphone calls on land line
[06:33]
GluffiScalling is ridiculusly cheap here [06:33]
mercutioand my cellphone plan used to be 49centres/minute to the same provider, and $1.40/minute to other networks [06:33]
GluffiSwe got flatrate cellphone plans for like 25USD a month [06:34]
mercutiothen voip providers were like 35 cents/minute or something [06:34]
GluffiScall anyone domestic :D [06:34]
mercutioi don't even know how much calling cellphones costs from landline here now [06:34]
GluffiSseems expensive :D [06:34]
mercutioit's 5c/min on voip and 10c/min on landline domestic as normal rate here
i didn't say it was cheap
we don't have other options though :/
businesses pay like 5c/min for local calls too
[06:34]
GluffiSi htink the differens between dsl only copper and dsl with pots copper is like 2USD a month [06:35]
mercutiobut residential get free local calling [06:35]
GluffiSahh [06:35]
mercutiohere the difference is about $20/month i think [06:35]
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[06:36]
mercutiowhich iz nd
is nzd
[06:36]
GluffiS:D [06:36]
mercutiobut often there's discount of $10/month if you have tolls through your isp [06:36]
GluffiShehe [06:36]
mercutioso it ends up being $10/month difference or such
so even as backup it's not silly
[06:36]
GluffiSsweden is really cheap for calling :D [06:36]
mercutioheh
how much do phone lines cost there?
it's $45 nzd here
i can probably work out conversion rate
you use SEK right?
[06:36]
GluffiSi guess 20USD a mon
mothn
yes
[06:37]
mercutiothat's 237.57 SEK [06:37]
GluffiShehe [06:37]
mercutiothat's just for a phone line no internet [06:37]
GluffiSyeah, around 22NZD for just phone here [06:37]
mercutioi think the cheapest naked dsl are about $60 [06:38]
GluffiShehe [06:38]
mercutioand the cheapest DSL+POTS is about $70
to me, it's the phone line that's overcharged
rather than the internet
[06:38]
GluffiSi think my colleague pays like 45NZD a month for 100Mbps fiber at his house :D [06:39]
mercutiocos the thing is for $19/month you can get cellphone prepay plan for 120 minutes of calling, 1gb of data, and unlimited text [06:39]
GluffiSwell, time to go to new years party :D
hehe
[06:39]
mercutiook
hf
[06:39]
GluffiShf [06:39]
mercutioheh [06:39]
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m0undshaha, that's one thing that benefits people living in geographically tiny places - cheap to deploy fast infrastructure [07:24]
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[08:08]
forgottencurious if anyone has a horrible experience attempting to use IPv6 and connections to freenode. Or any irc network for that matter.
god aweful slow. barely useable. etc
[08:11]
m0undsforgotten: openbsd? [08:13]
forgottenm0unds: yes. [08:14]
m0undsother people here have similar issues w/openbsd and ipv6 w/freenode [08:14]
forgottengotcha [08:14]
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m0undsforgotten: which IRC client? [08:15]
forgottenirssi
even just ping6 outs to google takes 1000ms for the first response tho
[08:15]
m0undswhoa [08:15]
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phluxI'm doing it right now
No issues
[08:17]
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m0undsyou could try using /set server_connect_timeout to 5min to see if that prevents you from timing out in irssi, but that sounds like something else is screwy if it's taking 1 sec to get a response from google
phlux: are you using openbsd?
[08:17]
phluxAh, no
FreeBSD
[08:17]
m0undssame here, no problems either
(freebsd)
[08:17]
forgottendigging thru irc logs that google finds [08:19]
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forgottenyeah right now i have like 50 to 75 percent packet loss on ipv6 :(. according to "mtr -6 www.google.com"
can't seem to find anything related on the web
[08:31]
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[08:33]
heavysixeranyone seen up_the_irons ? [08:35]
toddfnever in person ;-) [08:36]
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heavysixerheh [08:37]
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forgottenlteo: lol [08:38]
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m0undsforgotten: are you using the default /64 or did you have your /48 set up? [08:55]
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[08:56]
forgottenm0unds: default /64 [08:57]
m0undshm [08:58]
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[08:58]
m0undsdo you see packet loss if you just ping6 or mtr -6 the gateway? [08:58]
forgottenyep i get same amount to the first hop of the gateway
when going to google
running it by itself instantly goes to 40%, between 40 and 50%
[08:59]
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[09:00]
m0undsopen a ticket - i had a similar issue last week; in my case, it was a config issue w/the redundant switch [09:04]
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forgotte1mtr is still showing 33% loss. But PF was blocking some icmp6 stuff. have that resolved.
this seems way more useable than before. i am able to type now at least lol
not seeing any ipv6 releated blocks in PF. at all.
[09:05]
m0undsdo you still see packet loss if you temporarily disable pf? [09:08]
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[09:09]
forgotte1think i might have found something related
http://openbsd.7691.n7.nabble.com/4-8-current-tcpdump-pflog-unaligned-libpcap-packets-td170588.html
m0unds: and yes i have it disabled now. and am getting 60% loss to the Gateway addres
1. 2607:f2f8:a768::1 65.5% 30 0.7 0.7 0.4 1.5 0.3
so now my link is probably unrelated after trying this
[09:18]
brycecWell that's neat
I mtr google myself (from my Debian host) and part way throughthe second packet, ithe whole connection hangs for 6 seconds or so.
Did that twice in a row
fwiw forgotte1 I'm seeing packet loss sporadically, both to the gateway (55pkts, 1.7%) and to Google (70pkts 4.1%)
[09:26]
forgotte1mine will somewhat hang occationally too. which makes the loss spike higher
brycec: good to know. and that is from a debian vm ?
[09:28]
forgottenmy lag shows 8.02 in irssi. on the ipv6 con right now. heh [09:29]
brycecyep [09:29]
forgottenso it seems like an arp issue then. not an obsd issue. [09:29]
brycecI blame ARP's transit
brycec always plays the transit
[09:30]
forgottenwhat host are you on? [09:30]
bryceckvr07 [09:30]
forgottenim on kvr29 [09:31]
brycecI still see more problems with Freenode than any other IRC network, so I always chalk it up to Freenode [09:31]
forgottencept we are testing packet loss to goggle. and just the arp gateway lol
or i am
[09:32]
brycecheh
The packet loss I'm seeing is highly intermittent
I restarted mtr, 100 packet, no loss
[09:32]
forgotte1same here
0.0% all the way to google since i restarted it
[09:33]
brycecand suddenly, loss
(through the whole chain)
[09:34]
forgotte1now seeing some loss
11%
yep
something is majorly screwy.
those damn ubuntu servers !
:P
[09:35]
brycechopefully I'll have time to re-setup smokeping today [09:35]
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robonerd1.93.25.234 is trying to hack me right now [16:07]
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brycecChina is trying to hack a server? Unbelievable!! I've never heard of such a thing ever in my whole life. [16:52]
robonerdmy first intrusion attempt :)
i sent auth log to the noc of the registered an, confirmed sshd is configured to not allow root login, now i'm conifguring pf. next i'll install fail2ban
[16:53]
brycecbrycec has never, ever received a response from CNNIC. Nor has it ever appeared to do any good. [16:54]
robonerdwhat's cnnic? [16:55]
brycec@wiki CNNIC [16:56]
BryceBotChina Internet Network Information Center :: The China Internet Network Information Center (simplified Chinese: 中国互联网络信息中心; traditional Chinese: 中國互聯網絡信息中心; pinyin: Zhōngguó Hùlián Wǎngluò Xìnxī Zhōngxīn), or CNNIC, was founded as a non-profit organization on June 3, 1997. CNNIC is the administrative agency responsible for... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/China%20Internet%20Network%20Information% [16:56]
robonerdah
if they don't shape up ill just block their entire ip
block
[16:57]
brycecJust block China. It's not like you want anything to do with them
And heck, it's only 4,940 CIDR blocks
[16:58]
robonerddo you block all of china? [16:59]
brycecI'm confident that at this rate, fail2ban will take care of that for me [17:00]
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mercutiorobonerd: you can disable password auth [17:43]
robonerdmercutio and go to ssh key auth? [17:44]
mercutiorobonerd: yeh [17:44]
robonerdyep, i'll be getting to that after fail2ban
it's good to run both right?
[17:44]
mercutioi dunno about you, but i find encrypted key with unlocking it works best for me
if i use too many passwords i'll just be tempted to write them down, or cut and paste, or type the password into the wrong place.
i haven't typed any passwords into irc by accident yet though
[17:44]
robonerdcan't you make as many mistakes with a key file?
what if file gets corrupt or w/e
[17:45]
mercutioi dunno, to my mind it makes sense to have an alpha numeric password for root
in case you need to get in via oob
but for normal user it only matters if you use sudo :/
[17:45]
robonerdyou kinda lost me with those last 2. catch me up? [17:46]
mercutioand from that perspective if aynone hacks your user account they can get root
so it makes more sene to me to just log in as root to do root things, and as a user to do user things.
and keep them seggregated.
if the file gets corrupt?
files don't normally get corrupt. but in case yo lose your hard-drive you can have your key in multiple places
and if it's encrypted then you just unlock it once.
[17:46]
robonerdafter i fail2ban_enable="Y" in rc.conf, then what? to enable fail2van with pf, please [17:47]
mercutioi assume you need to reboot, if it's in rc.conf, but there may be some way to reread it
oh i lost you sorry i am losing myself :/
too much coffee
with a key file, you can encrypt or have it not encrypted
if you have a key file unencrypted you can just copy it to every host you connect from, and connect with no passwrod at all
if you encrypt it you have to type an unlock passphrase on the key file to connect to a remote host
which is the same for all hosts you connect to with that key
but if you use something like ssh-agent, you can type that unlock passphrase once, and keep reconnecting to different hosts
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brycec<-- always surprised to learn people still use passwords for SSH auth [18:12]
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mnathanibrycec: I use keys, but what do you do when you are on a new machine, do you have to keep a copy of your key handy? Passwords are a lot more portable [21:06]
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brycecmnathani: I'm not saying never-ever-ever-ever-use passwords. There is a time, albeit briefly, for their use. In-person, freshly setup, etc. My surprise comes from those who use passwords daily, as if they were perfectly secure, etc. [22:04]
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[22:05]
brycecBryce's rules for basic security: Disable ssh login as root (or if you really must, key-only). If you can, disable password ssh altogether; if you cannot, at least setup two-factor. And yeah, you should probably have a passphrase on your key, and keep backup copies of your key in safe places, and while we're at it, use different keys for different machines/networks/etc. [22:06]
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mercutioyou only need your public key
which you can stick on a web site or such if need be
ie you can give your public key out freely and not worry about it. It's the private key you have to keep secure.
what i tend to do is set a bad password, then stick key on, then change to a better password
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robonerdcan someone try to own my arp vps and see how the sec is? [23:52]

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