wow, i just found out that my boss has been on floss weekly (#143) do the vps hosts have static ip's? vlaad: yes is there another attack going on atm? everything is really really slow I can verify it's not my system. load is 0.2~ and 12 gb free memory so no swapping. my box works good sorressean: can you do a mtr next time? the cloudy services don't have (or don't default to) static ips soo whats up? mkb: oh yeh you add a floating ip on cost and it costs more :) s/cost/top/ mkb: oh yeh you add a floating ip on top and it tops more :) what it should have just matched the first one :) s/ /w00t itw00tshouldw00thavew00tjustw00tmatchedw00tthew00tfirstw00tonew00t:) 0,/w00t/test/ Hoping for ed(1)? erk that's still not right, but it doesn't pickup on it anyway vim doesn't replace all by default :) what are the main differences between using the cisco anyconnect client, vs just using built in vpn connector in windows for ipsec vpn? cisco vpn client will screw with your host mtu last i knew just use the windows one. do you know if vpn licenses would be included with: ASA5505-50-BUN-K9 just use openvpn on a pc it's more friendly with cellphone networks etc. (PCRE sets /g by default) (i think specifically it's just PHP's PCRE init that does, but whatever. fact is it's out of my hands.) openvpn++ from me too (yes I saw this convo the other day) brycec: so there's no workaround? s/e/Q/1 brycQc: so there's no workaround? I added a "custom flag" to BryceBot's regex, /1 oh cool :) Most users assume/expect /g now, so I left it this way s/\"/\*/1 I added a *custom flag" to BryceBot's regex, /1 sweet at first i was like why's /1 on the end? :) (cos i'd gotten it from your eralier thind said) lol I did the same, and I *wrote* it http://php.net/manual/en/reference.pcre.pattern.modifiers.php are what's valid hmm apparently ubuntu 15.10 has live kernel patching i remember reading about linux introducing official support for such things. i just didn't know ubuntu was going down that road yet. so ubuntu 16.04 is sounding pretty promising is it really live kernel patching? I remember a thing a few years ago but all it was jumping back to the bootloader on reboot rather than going through ACPI and the BIOS again yeah i think it's really live that was and still is really buggy afaik mkb like hardware init etc can get messed up yeah I know i used to have a 386 that booted really fast I've got a bunch of servers that get stuck waiting for someone to hit a key for 30 minutes on reboot but until recent uefi stuff pc's have generally all been really slow to boot something with pxe or the remote management, all I know is I can't find the off switch and I hate them i was using it for testing some grub kernel stuff. so it was convenient :) you can disable pxe in bios normally well on servers usually you can disable in the bios for the whole server I need pxe on desktops you can disable by pressing ctrl-s at bootup normally disable delays i mean hmm pxe is nice :) y'know that normal desktop boards have pxe on internal ethernet usually now? have they not? every desktop I've ever seen offers to boot pxe mine can even boot pxe uefi ahh they didn't used to Every desktop I've bought in the last 10 years has (because that's how long I've been using PXE) maybe i just had cheap boards. i used to use intel ethernet to pxe In fact, a Dell tower with a P4 from 2002 has it builtin yeh it's prob more common on dell, hp, rather than weird gigabyte etc things. I have Gigabyte desktop boards running AMD64's from 2005 :D hmm, now i'm wondering how long ago that was hah (okay, no grin really... they're rather long in the tooth now. But hey, exact same brand as you mentioned) hmm i had amd64 in 2001 i think (GA-M51 or something like that sounds familiar. ) is it really that old? Roughly. Don't think it was 2001 thoguh *though yeah maybe that was another amd that's when i did gigabit :) "The first AMD64-based processor, the Opteron, was released in April 2003." according to wikipedia ahh it must have been pre athlon64 (Also, I meant to say Athlon64 when I was talking about my Gigabyte boards) Athlon64 "first introduced on September 23, 2003." oh it was k6-2 500 That was nowhere near 64bit ;P But at least you had MMX2 or whatever it was called i think the v6-233s or whatever were pretty good the k6-2s seemed a bit mediocre but cheap @wiki AMD K6 AMD K6 :: The K6 microprocessor was launched by AMD in 1997. The main advantage of this particular microprocessor is that it was designed to fit into existing desktop designs for Pentium branded CPUs. It was marketed as a product which could perform as well as its Intel Pentium II equivalent but at a significantly lower price. The K6 had a considerable impact on the PC market and... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AMD%20K6 there were a lot more upgrades back then :) heh Back when 200MHz was a significant step up i was happy when playnig mp3s used less than 50% cpu so that doing other stuff wouldn't induce skipping my windows computer seems so slow these days haha, MP3's on my old 90MHz ppc used about 90%+ but i can't just upgrade cpu and expect it to get better a lot of it seems to be weird random lockups, delays, pauses etc. and it has ssd+32gb of ram i think part of it is related to locking from video card though as much as people seem to suggest linux graphics performance isn't great, it doesn't seem to induce long delays like windows