[00:23] *** dne has quit IRC (Remote host closed the connection) [00:23] *** dne has joined #arpnetworks [01:18] *** erratic_ has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 240 seconds) [02:57] *** dj_goku has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 255 seconds) [02:57] *** erratic has joined #arpnetworks [02:58] *** erratic is now known as Guest87324 [03:30] *** DaCa has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 276 seconds) [03:30] *** DaCa has joined #arpnetworks [06:43] mercutio: http://nzix.net/peers.html [06:53] *** Guest87324 has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 252 seconds) [08:26] *** dferris has quit IRC (Quit: leaving) [08:26] *** dferris has joined #arpnetworks [11:03] *** dferris has quit IRC (Quit: Lost terminal) [11:08] *** cpinkus has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:08] *** brycec has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:08] *** NiTeMaRe has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:08] *** jcv has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:08] *** hazardous has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:08] *** Hien has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:08] *** eryc has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:08] *** pjs has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:08] *** BryceBot has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:08] *** up_the_irons has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:08] *** josephb has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:10] *** cpinkus has joined #arpnetworks [11:10] *** brycec has joined #arpnetworks [11:10] *** jcv has joined #arpnetworks [11:10] *** Hien has joined #arpnetworks [11:10] *** eryc has joined #arpnetworks [11:10] *** hazardous has joined #arpnetworks [11:10] *** pjs has joined #arpnetworks [11:10] *** josephb has joined #arpnetworks [11:10] *** up_the_irons has joined #arpnetworks [11:10] *** BryceBot has joined #arpnetworks [11:10] *** barjavel.freenode.net sets mode: +o up_the_irons [11:13] *** NiTeMaRe has joined #arpnetworks [11:14] *** cpinkus has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:15] *** NiTeMaRe has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:15] *** brycec has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:15] *** jcv has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:15] *** hazardous has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:15] *** Hien has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:15] *** eryc has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:15] *** pjs has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:15] *** BryceBot has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:15] *** up_the_irons has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:15] *** josephb has quit IRC (*.net *.split) [11:16] *** NiTeMaRe has joined #arpnetworks [11:16] *** cpinkus has joined #arpnetworks [11:16] *** brycec has joined #arpnetworks [11:16] *** jcv has joined #arpnetworks [11:16] *** Hien has joined #arpnetworks [11:16] *** eryc has joined #arpnetworks [11:16] *** hazardous has joined #arpnetworks [11:16] *** pjs has joined #arpnetworks [11:16] *** josephb has joined #arpnetworks [11:16] *** up_the_irons has joined #arpnetworks [11:16] *** BryceBot has joined #arpnetworks [11:16] *** barjavel.freenode.net sets mode: +o up_the_irons [14:33] *** erratic has joined #arpnetworks [14:34] *** erratic is now known as Guest21703 [15:50] *** Guest21703 has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 240 seconds) [16:03] static: what about it? [16:04] static: the silly visualisation thingy? [16:11] I thought it was cool [16:12] i didn't? [16:12] such a killjoy mercutio [16:12] i tried looking around at it [16:12] i can't tell what's connected to what, too much data [16:12] all it seems to say to me is that vocus is huge [16:15] the clustering is cool [16:15] so the right side of the map is new zealand [16:15] lol i totally remember phtml; fuck i'm old [16:17] i nwver understood why people didn't do cgi's in c back then. [16:17] considering the cpus were slow, and memory was limited [16:17] cgi's in perl were much easier [16:17] and perl was really slow/bloaty [16:17] it was fast enough [16:17] mercutio: http://nzix.net/nzix-map/#HIX-CITYLINK-NZ-AP%20Hamilton%20Internet%20Exchange%20%28Citylink%29,NZ [16:17] best IX in NZ right there [16:17] well id id find the web too slow in general :) [16:18] so i stuck to irc hah [16:18] i can't see it gizmo? [16:18] it's just showing the wide map [16:19] actually mod_perl wasn't too bad [16:19] mercutio: exactly [16:19] or does linking the fragment not work? [16:19] up_the_irons: ntp reminder [16:20] anyway do a search for HIX and click on it [16:21] brycec: where did we leave off? i think i swapped the conversation from my mind; need more RAM! [16:21] brain RAM [16:21] ok [16:21] i can't believe they called it hix [16:22] hix finds chix instead [16:22] whcih is tiny [16:22] hix is right below chix... [16:22] oh it didn't bring up the search results the frist time for some reason [16:22] his has less connections than plain :/ [16:23] DTS is at HIX too, it's just not showing up for some reason [16:23] maybe with ufb more people will connect to it [16:24] http://www.nmix.net/ [16:24] oh dear, this looks like it's from the 90s [16:24] it sure is [16:24] 1997, in fact [16:24] is it meant to be 256 colour friendly [16:24] hy is there dithering in the anti aliasing [16:25] 10/100 switch for servers and router conenctivity [16:25] the main peering in nz started in 99 [16:25] but there was some peering before that [16:26] but gizmo will know more about that than me i imagine [16:26] http://www.nmix.net/people.html [16:26] nice graphs [16:26] The page on pricing for connecting to the NMIX is due to be updated. [16:27] so what happened to nmix? [16:27] yeah so I think it all started with "NZIX" [16:27] I even found the email post from Lindsay when it was decomissioned - http://list.waikato.ac.nz/pipermail/nznog/2001-August/003161.html [16:27] ahh [16:28] unfortunately it's a little hard to search for "NZIX" now :) [16:28] yeah [16:28] haha - http://wand.net.nz/wits/nzix/1/ [16:28] we have network traces! [16:28] Capture Start (Local) Thu Nov 12 10:56:44 1998 [16:28] Capture End (Local) Sun Apr 11 14:11:12 1999 [16:29] Packets Captured 238 million [16:29] lolz. back when the internet was easy [16:29] do you read nznog gizmo? [16:29] yup [16:29] see the post just now? [16:29] i don't quite get it [16:29] from Dean? [16:29] i can't see any labels [16:30] yeh [16:30] i just see lots of circles with a - in the middle [16:30] the AS numbers are written in the circles [16:30] oh [16:30] it's tiny writing [16:30] at least they are when I load the PDF in google doc [16:30] and google docs won't zoom in enough [16:30] zoom in man [16:30] get better eyes [16:30] i'm at maximum zoom! [16:31] google drive the app is currently unreachable [16:31] gah [16:32] lol up_the_irons no worries, I know exactly what you mean [16:32] (Also my computer was just throwing a swapping fit) [16:32] hmm even when i sdave the image and zoom it's hard to read the numbers [16:33] brycec: haha [16:33] up_the_irons: You asked if ARP should just point at my own, I suggested ARP has its own instance unattached to my account. You asked what was needed, I said a "small" would be more than enough. (think I gave some specific specs, don't remember) Oh, and Debian Wheezy for the image. [16:34] ah ok [16:34] hmm can you print it? [16:34] it doesn't work for me [16:35] (I'll leave the ARP management user on there, I'll set it up with user-login only +sudo for management, I'll set up ntpd and apticron, then I'm hands-off just letting it run, plus updates) [16:35] roger that [16:37] brycec: think of a spiffy hostname [16:37] dingus [16:37] time [16:37] I was going to say "ntp1" bug dingus is good. So is hiccup [16:37] Also, tick, or tock [16:38] or ticktock [16:38] you could always cname ntp1 to it [16:39] he probably will, but the admin side still gets a special name... [16:42] a super scientific study of drug mentions on twitter has ruled that albuquerque is the meth capital of the us [16:42] "by a landslide" [16:42] haha [16:42] go figure people might talk about breaking bad on twitter [16:42] not naming it dingus [16:42] SPOILER ALERT [16:42] and denver is the stoner capital? [16:42] lol [16:42] JERK [16:42] try again :) [16:42] CO [16:43] yea [16:43] whatsit [16:43] up_the_irons: zeit [16:43] up_the_irons: Chronos [16:43] throbbingdumptruck [16:44] LOL [16:44] uhh [16:44] filet-o-fish [16:44] ant: YES [16:44] ant wins [16:44] I'm down with zeit [16:44] @wiki Zeit [16:44] Zeit :: Zeit (English: Time) is the third album by the German electronic music group Tangerine Dream. A double LP, it was released in August 1972, being the first release featuring Peter Baumann, who joined then-current members Christopher Franke and Edgar Froese. Overview The style of this album is slower and more atmospheric than their previous albums. Its atmospheric drone... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeit [16:44] brycec: chronos is good too, but i like the German flair of zeit [16:44] yard-o-beef [16:45] m0unds has strange ideas on hostnames :) [16:45] tangerine dream ftw [16:45] mine are all named after pelican songs [16:45] m0unds: LOL [16:45] haha [16:45] m0unds: what aer your own boxes called? [16:45] sirius, pulse, mammoth [16:46] not quite so bad :) [16:46] also wangsmith [16:46] m0unds: tangerine dream could almost be a porn star name [16:46] hahaha, yeah [16:46] probably is a stripper's name somewhere [16:46] srsly [16:48] What /hasn't/ been used as a stripper's name? [16:48] yard-o-beef [16:48] i hope [16:48] well, maybe a male stripper's name [16:49] or filet-o-fish i guess, that'd be pretty bad too [16:49] lol [16:49] next time i go to a strip club i'm tellin' them my name is "yard-o-beef". I will report on the results. [16:49] ;) [16:49] hahah [16:50] do strip clubs ask names? [16:51] Usually only when you're coming in the back door [16:51] the strippers do [16:51] i thought they were kind of impersonal places. [16:51] ahh just to get you to like them so you give them money [16:51] yup [16:52] i'd just say i was john doe probably [16:52] they always ask names, try to be all friendly and stuff [16:55] ahh ok [16:55] up_the_irons: what dif you think of acf's route-map? [16:55] mercutio: looked promising [16:56] cool. [16:57] what's "z" in hacker... [16:57] in l33t speak? [16:57] yep [16:57] 1337 [16:57] i think it's just z? [16:57] h4ckt3hpl4n4t [16:57] what if it had to be a number... or a-f... you might see where i'm going with this... [16:57] so like z317 [16:57] lol [16:57] for zeit [16:58] yeah but i can't use 'z' in the IPv6 address :) [16:58] UP_7|-|3_1r0|\|$ 1$ 1|\|70 L337? [16:58] http://www.brenz.net/services/l337Maker.asp [16:58] maybe just ::3317 will do [16:58] just do f00f or something [16:59] hahaha [16:59] b1ff [16:59] 2317 [16:59] b00b5 [16:59] lol [16:59] ofh it shoudl be 4 letters. [16:59] 2 = z, close enough [16:59] i'm boring and just use a, b, c, d, e, f etc [17:00] zeit's IPv6 will be: 2607:f2f8:0:102::2317 [17:00] upon second glance, that is as boring as anything else... bah [17:01] next time, b00b [17:02] yeah ther's no nice way to make ipv6 addresses look nice [17:02] thats what DNS is for, making ip's look nice :P [17:12] *** erratic has joined #arpnetworks [17:12] *** erratic is now known as Guest92183 [17:27] *** Guest92183 has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 240 seconds) [17:42] *** erratic has joined #arpnetworks [17:43] *** erratic is now known as Guest32787 [17:57] 7.1.3.2.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.2.0.1.0.0.0.0.0.8.f.2.f.7.0.6.2.ip6.arpa. 86400 IN PTR zeit.arpnetworks.com. [17:57] I guess one part has been taken care of [17:59] It's all ready to go, i just need brycec to give me his pub key so he can login [18:03] does it have its own vlan? [18:03] heh, i'm sure people ask more technical questions here than other providers :) [18:03] it's on one of our regular VLANs [18:07] whats the max mtu supported on the dedicated nics for the backup lan? [18:08] 9K [18:09] nice [18:09] i wish "the internet" supported large mtu's [18:11] up_the_irons: is there a sample /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth1 script for CentOS for use with the dedicated NIC [18:11] my attempt to initialize the NIC: Bringing up interface eth1: Device does not seem to be present, delaying initialization. [18:12] no sample. it's just a regular NIC [18:13] the link-local that you should be able to reach is: fe80::21b:21ff:fe93:3e08 [18:16] I notice pretty consistently my ssh connection drops, it could possibly be due to the internet connection I'm on but I doubt this because I've never had problems before? [18:18] also I'd like to know how this person is able to talk to my broadcast [18:18] [252089.854106] iptables denied: IN=eth0 OUT= MAC=52:54:00:27:25:50:00:0d:65:ab:c8:bf:08:00 SRC=71.6.135.131 DST=206.125.168.79 LEN=40 TOS=0x00 PREC=0x00 TTL=117 ID=49532 PROTO=TCP SPT=32560 DPT=80 WINDOW=3474 RES=0x00 SYN URGP=0 [18:19] wait nevermind it was blocked but still [18:19] I did not know that was even possible. [18:21] [root@cgirun ~]# ping6 -I eth1 fe80::21b:21ff:fe93:3e08 [18:21] PING fe80::21b:21ff:fe93:3e08(fe80::21b:21ff:fe93:3e08) from fe80::5054:ff:feb7:223e eth1: 56 data bytes [18:21] 64 bytes from fe80::21b:21ff:fe93:3e08: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=1.29 ms [18:21] up_the_irons: success! [18:23] mnathani: awesome! [18:23] Guest32787: what's the other MAC? [18:23] that does indeed look weird [18:23] https://gist.github.com/paigeadele/92d7290e761e56e88a43 [18:24] Gist: "https://gist.github.com/92d7290e761e56e88a43" [18:24] pretty happy with it over all [18:24] both of those give me 500 errors [18:27] *** mnathani has quit IRC (Read error: Connection reset by peer) [18:28] Guest32787: well, to the rest of the internet, they don't know it's a broadcast. broadcast addresses are routed the same way. i don't think my core is going to deny that as a valid address even if it *is* the broadcast on your vlan. i suspect the same would happen if someone sent a packet to your network number (the all zeros subnet address) [18:28] so, *shrug*, i think it's normal [18:36] *** mnathani has joined #arpnetworks [18:36] yeah I think so too [18:37] I've never setup a network this way sadly so its just unusual to me [18:37] *** Guest32787 is now known as erratic [18:37] different stuff to look for [18:45] I just decided it would be fun to start up my windows vm, and configure the network adapter to bridge my laptop's vpn adapter and see if I can configure a static v4/v6 address for it and it worked [18:46] I kinda wish it didnt' because, the vpn client connects to openvpn, which deals/pushes a config based on the CN of the client certificate [18:46] and I wish it would only allow IP settings as per that config to be allowed for that client but oh well [18:51] http://www.petros-project.com/ [18:53] up_the_irons: can I possibly pay for my service for the months to come in advance? [18:53] and possibly later if necesarry on a case by case basis just pay an additional $5 for 200GB of extra bandwidth when needed? [19:15] erratic: you can just deny access to broadcast address [19:15] lots of people block it for various reasons [19:19] up_the_irons: how do I verify if my mtu setting is working when accessing the backup server? [19:20] things like: ping6 -M do -s 8972 fe80::21b:21ff:fe93:3e08%eth1 dont seem to work [19:21] you are using ipv6 [19:21] you need to go smaller [19:21] mercutio: already done [19:21] 28 bytes is for ipv4 [19:31] ping6 fe80::5054:ff:feb7:223e%eth1 -M do -s 10500 [19:31] I meant 1500, does not work [19:32] perhaps not all switches have jumbo frames enabled [19:44] not all hosts accept large pings too [19:44] just see if tcp/ip traffic works [19:44] tcpdump [19:45] and check what the mtu says [19:51] ls works in a directory when I am connected via the linklocal ssh to the backup server from my vps, but ls -l does not work. [19:51] verified using 2 different vps [19:53] not sure if it has to do with the 9000 byte mtu [20:13] set the MTU back to 1500 and things are working now [20:14] there may be a mtu issue somewhere in the middle :) [20:14] pmtu doesn't work usually [20:14] i imagine his switches are fine, adn it may be the linux host that it goes via [20:16] IIRC up_the_irons may have to set the MTU of your bridge to the backup VLAN [20:16] ^ [20:16] was just thinking that [20:17] lol [20:17] oh or that [20:17] Hey m0unds quick question - how much bandwidth (network/disk) does one of your cameras chew up? [20:18] um, lowest bitrate we're using is on wlan segments and that's 1mbit/sec [20:18] typical is 2mbit [20:18] That's no tooooo bad. [20:18] that's 720p @ 30ips, h264 2mbit [20:18] Was talking with a guy tasked with quoting cctv for a school [20:20] ah [20:20] (And wondered what kind of storage was required) [20:20] "hey, I know a guy..." [20:20] yeah, it's not too bad [20:20] This school ended up with 900 cameras, and they wanted all video stored off-site [20:21] Much laughing was laughed. [20:21] 900 cameras at a school? [20:21] * brycec shrugs [20:21] wtf [20:21] hahah [20:21] Big school I guess, maybe multiple campuses. [20:21] ah [20:21] okay, then that makes sense [20:21] i was thinking..high school or something [20:21] (I really don't know) [20:22] offsite video wouldn't be too bad, assuming offsite could mean different location within like 70km [20:22] dark fibre? [20:22] It was for some city's public schools, and the way he talked, it was for one school. But doesn't matteer. [20:22] yea [20:22] lol [20:22] School district was definitely looking to cheap out, so no fibre [20:23] ah, so magic remote video storage [20:23] Regardless, that's ~3GBps... [20:23] mnathani: for your host on kvr29, try the mtu thing again [20:23] yeah, a bit goofy [20:23] bridge was still 1500, as well as physical int; looks like i never made that change on that host (need to add it to puppet) [20:24] m0unds: Not very smart people are involved too... not surprising, really. I'm waiting for a multicast flood :D [20:24] bwahaha [20:25] we're gonna be adding some cameras at an admin building about 7mi from this facility [20:26] our IS dept is having 70 pairs of SM run between here and there [20:26] Fun fun! [20:27] yup [20:28] Welp I'm out again... adios [20:28] ttyl [20:58] *** DaCa has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 245 seconds) [20:59] *** DaCa has joined #arpnetworks [21:02] up_the_irons: 9000 byte mtu on kvr29 is a go.: 8408 bytes from fe80::21b:21ff:fe93:3e08: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=1.13 ms [21:03] probably something similar on kvr02 [21:04] any performance difference? [21:07] sent 395 bytes received 1857525269 bytes 30702903.54 bytes/sec [21:07] atleast 1.5 times faster [21:07] without the 9000 mtu: [21:08] sent 395 bytes received 1857525269 bytes 20081358.53 bytes/sec [21:12] is there a way to cycle the colours assigned to nicks in weechat? [21:13] brycec and m0unds got assigned the same color and now I have a page full of cyan. (They had a lot of back and forth messages in the last hour) [21:21] lol mnathani I know what you mean [21:21] especially hard to read things with nicks of the same length [21:28] *** dj_goku has joined #arpnetworks [21:33] I gues I could just quit weechat and re-join [21:33] *** mnathani has quit IRC (Quit: WeeChat 0.4.2) [21:33] *** mnathani has joined #arpnetworks [21:34] no go: still the same colours for brycec and m0unds [21:35] mnathani: If it's like the irssi plugin, it's based on the length of the nick [21:50] wee, my AC blew up [21:54] eek [22:01] At least you had AC to blow up :p [22:01] up_the_irons: zeit's setup [22:04] brycec: is it limited to respond only to ARP addresses? Or will it be part of a larger pool - open to all ? [22:04] I set it up publicly [22:04] Even part of pool.ntp.org [22:04] up_the_irons is free to object [22:05] http://www.pool.ntp.org/scores/2607:f2f8:0:102::2317 http://www.pool.ntp.org/scores/208.79.89.249 [22:06] brycec: cool [22:06] Only 100mbps so don't flood it >.> [22:06] <.< [22:07] (or maybe it's mirrors.arpnetworks.com that's 100mbps) [22:11] ntpdate: 20 Jun 01:11:05 ntpdate[2086]: step time server 208.79.89.249 offset -170.759611 sec [22:13] sheesh mnathani [22:14] haha, i don't think houses exist in NM without some form of climate control [22:14] unless you live in a 200 year old half-buried adobe thing in taos or something [22:14] haha [22:15] m0unds: Up on the Canadian border (or close to) they do. Well most new houses have central heat/cool. But apartments are lucky if they have a little wall/window unit. [22:16] yeah, i had a friend who lived in victoria and didn't have AC [22:16] but i said NM :) [22:17] not cananadada [22:17] my buddy's apt in southern california didn't have AC either, now that i think about it (seal beach area) [22:17] harsh [22:51] is it just me or is verizon/comcast looking better tonight [22:53] not Verizon [22:53] according to smokeping anyway [22:54] comcast has 0 packets dropped with 100 packets [22:54] comcast is super intermittent [22:54] http://kremvax.acfsys.net/smokeping.cgi?target=Remote.comcastnet [22:55] oh wow [22:55] and verizon is slightly intermittent [22:55] maybe i was just lucky [22:55] now i'm finding loss [22:56] ah [22:56] have you tried curl with smokeping? [22:56] you mean instead of fping? [22:56] I haven't [22:56] or as well [22:56] it's pretty good for showing throughput [22:57] I'll have to configure that up [22:57] it's not too bad [22:59] http://pastebin.com/2TNdU3tb [23:01] i forced ipv4 and noproxy [23:01] as i have http_proxy in envronment and restarted smokeping [23:01] and ipv6 gives different performance to ipv4, and when you connect via hostname it can often default to it [23:01] giving misleading results. [23:02] thanks for the config [23:02] I'll drop it in [23:03] i have a few targets [23:03] i just gave one as an example [23:03] i do most of my testing on port 24 to bypass proxies [23:04] bypass proxies? [23:05] where is the traffic proxied? [23:05] transparent proxies [23:05] anywhere [23:05] I actually wasn't aware that existed [23:06] on the public internet [23:06] traffic is transparent proied on most isp's here [23:06] how can a transparent proxy be detected? [23:06] is it stuff is forefront or squid? [23:06] lots of them spoof the client ip these days [23:07] tcptraceroute is usually the easisest way [23:07] why would they want/need to have them? [23:08] performance, bandwith savings [23:08] i'm in favour of proxying tbh [23:09] i wish things like wikipedia would cache better though [23:10] and it means if there's connections like wifi it tends to improve performance [23:11] or overloaded web sties [23:13] 3g networks do it soemetimes too afaik [23:13] mnathani: roger on the 9000 mtu [23:14] brycec: thanks for setting up zeit! i don't mind it being part of pool.ntp.org, as long as that dumb monlist thing is turned off (e.g. the NTP amp. attacks we saw a couple months ago) [23:15] up_the_irons: quick question [23:15] is it possible for arp metal customers to be on the backup network? [23:16] you are already on gigabit LAN, so whats the point? [23:16] perhaps the jumbo frames, maybe [23:16] yeah [23:16] jumbo frames, and inter-customer connectivity [23:17] acf_: i haven't done that before. all ports are access ports (not trunk), or in non-cisco speak, they are untagged ports. so i can't give ARP Metal customers the backup vlan tag. However, with some modifications, it's not impossible. [23:18] up_the_irons: any idea why the 9000mtu wouldnt work on my kvr02 VPS? [23:18] up_the_irons: Yep, long-patched in ntp, And i've double-checked it. [23:19] so port wuold have to be switched to trunk [23:19] brycec: did you install something like fail2ban or apf/bfd for the ntp server to deal with brute force attempts [23:19] mnathani: cuz i haven't made the same changes as i did on kvr29 [23:19] brycec: awesome, tnx [23:20] brycec: the ssh port should be changed; cheap way to avoid a potential of problems [23:21] acl ssh? [23:37] to all who would like to beta test zeit (our new official NTP server, thanks to brycec), you can use: zeit.arpnetworks.com [23:37] mnathani: fail2ban [23:37] up_the_irons: sure, one sec [23:37] up_the_irons: everything looking clean with your tcpdumps? [23:38] yeah, not much traffic :) [23:38] not yet anyways [23:38] My ARP VPS has 602 hosts in its monlist, but it's been public for a little while [23:40] cool [23:51] mnathani: your kvr02 vps should be good to go with mtu 9k now also