forgotte1: I know I'm late to the party, but i'm not seeing any issues now. of course, that doesn't mean it was working for me when you asked :P bah, managed to miss all but one of these new netbsd vulns. wee staticsafe: have you used the twitch integration in ps2 at all? That's what she said!! ("But the PS2 doesn't even have PSN.... Oh, you meant PlanetSide 2" It made sense too since the PS4 has Twitch) getting annoying audio looping with it bah m0unds: yes, it doesn't work very well i suggest using OBS Omni Bearing Selector? https://obsproject.com/ Ah. oh cool, i'll do that instead it was really kludgy using the one ingame - if you go from windowed > fullsize, it stops streaming http://www.twitch.tv/m0unds/c/5109343 looked horrible at 2.5mbit too Is there a way to isolate or pinpoint which application is making a dns query via the system? For instance it might be useful to single out Firefox DNS queries vs Chrome queries on the same box. On a related note, would it be possible to restrict an application from performing dns queries using the system? direct dns queries to say google public dns from the application would be another story. mnathani: What system/OS? application firewalling is historically pretty weak on Linux and the like Windows app firewalling is easy on modern windows (vista+_ ) I've seen plenty of app firewalls on Windows, starting with ZoneAlarm (ages ago, I know) yea, wfp itself can do it though without additional software would system dns queries via the local resolver be able to firewall with the application firewall? like...system application NS queries, or like local to the system NS queries? hmm .. ^ that confuses me I guess regular system queries, not directed to a recursive name server port 53 the system would then query its recursive resolver i was just trying to figure out if you meant windows core svcs or applications on a windows system because those are handled differently by wfp generally an application that relies on the windows service at any rate, wireshark with "dns" as the filter would show you what queries are occurring, but not the app making them and whose query would cache them visible in : ipconfig /displaydns if you wanted to see in realtime which apps are making ns queries, you could use resource monitor and watch for activity involving your recursive resolver if you're using chrome/chromium, you could look at chrome://net-internals but that's a mess of debug utilities and stuff chrome://net-internals/#dns this will show you chrome/chromium's own NS cache I'm pretty sure netmon is still around, with the proper filter it would tell you who's making DNS queries. m0unds brycec : thanks np up_the_irons: I am curious as to what, back in the day sparked your interest in learning about IPv6 and providing IPv6 services. IPv6 availability is certainly one of the primary factors for me choosing ARP Networks. up_the_irons2: ^ it's weird how many hosts still only assign single v6 addresses or pools of like 8 or 16 addresses I'm happy that my (shitty) ISP provides IPv6! It has better routing to my ARP VPS! still waiting for native ipv6 here What are folks running instead of BIND these days? Trying to upgrade to FreeBSD 10 but I see BIND is gone so I might as well switch. doesn't fbsd10 use unbound? I need an authoritative sevrer. oh NSD looks interesting. Supports BIND configuration files, that's nice. BSD licensed, DNSSEC. Winner! up_the_irons2: So I'm on FreeBSD 10 now, how do I get on this virtio train? Also, seeing 200ms jump between 10ge10-3.core1.lax1.he.net and 10ge1-3.core1.lax2.he.net. Pretty terrible latency right now. Same lag bandwagon here (HE tunnel through sea1, but of course I hit lax1 on my way to ARP)