[00:11] *** toeshred has quit IRC (Quit: WeeChat 1.0.1) [00:12] *** toeshred has joined #arpnetworks [00:35] mercutio: I know I have asked before, but could you remind me of that site that gives you a score based on your ssl certificate? [00:36] was it https://www.ssllabs.com/ssltest/ [00:38] More than likely, yes [00:39] (Since you mentioned scoring) [00:59] yeh it would have been [01:31] whats an elastic interconnect ? [01:31] isn't that an amazon thing? [01:36] I tried searching and the term didnt come up as an amazon thing, although someone was mentioning it as an Amazon related service provided by Megaport [01:52] https://www.megaport.com/services/features [05:03] *** ziyourenxiang has joined #arpnetworks [05:14] *** Seji has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 276 seconds) [05:17] *** Seji has joined #arpnetworks [06:58] *** Gazby has joined #arpnetworks [07:02] good morning everyone [07:02] could someone point me in the right direction to cancel a service please? [07:40] *** rmlhhd has quit IRC (Remote host closed the connection) [08:02] *** qbit has quit IRC (Quit: WeeChat 1.4) [08:11] *** qbit has joined #arpnetworks [08:12] *** toeshred has quit IRC (Quit: WeeChat 1.0.1) [08:17] Gazby, support@arpnetworks.com [08:22] *** toeshred has joined #arpnetworks [08:44] *** Gazby has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 276 seconds) [09:03] *** ziyourenxiang has quit IRC (Quit: Leaving) [10:12] *** Gazby has joined #arpnetworks [10:30] thanks mkb [10:30] is that standard, i couldn't even find any documentation indicating how to cancel a service [10:31] after i started getting invoice overdue reminders when my CC expired, I went to cancel it and couldn't find how, figured i would eventually get cut off [10:31] it's still running five months later [11:26] spoke to garry, all sorted, thanks again [11:50] *** Gazby has quit IRC () [12:20] what letter will ubuntu 18.04 start with? [12:22] mnathani_: did you figure out the interconnect thing? [13:03] @google ubuntu 18.04 [13:03] 11,700 total results returned for 'ubuntu 18.04', here's 3 [13:03] Download Ubuntu Server | Download | Ubuntu (http://www.ubuntu.com/download/server) The Long Term Support version of Ubuntu Server, including the Icehouse release of OpenStack and support guaranteed until April 2019 — 64-bit only. [13:03] Ubuntu 18.04 LTS to Be Fully in Sync with Debian, Without Ubuntu ... (https://www.reddit.com/r/Ubuntu/comments/45ep1p/ubuntu_1804_lts_to_be_fully_in_sync_with_debian/) Feb 12, 2016 ... inaccurateUbuntu 18.04 LTS to Be Fully in Sync with Debian, Without Ubuntu Specific Patches (plus.google.com). submitted 19 days ago by ... [13:03] Release end of life | Ubuntu (http://www.ubuntu.com/info/release-end-of-life) When an Ubuntu release reaches its end of life it receives no further maintenance updates, including critical security upgrades. It is highly recommended that ... [13:03] well that was less useful than I would have liked... [13:36] heh [13:36] i was just thinking they were going to run out of letters [13:36] well before ubuntu 18.04; but lts i was more curious about [13:37] oh ubuntu 18.04 may be called ballsy baboon [13:37] or busy beaver [13:37] so yeah they're going back to the start [13:40] Aw I was hoping they'd wrap into numbers, base-36 style [13:53] mercutio: the link brycec posted describes it using a bunch of other keywords I dont understand - but yea its an amazon or cloud based SDN Networking thing :-) [13:53] lol [13:53] mnathani_: i've heard of megaport [13:53] mnathani_: Are you familiar with datacenter interconnects? [13:53] their idea is bandwidth capacity on demand [13:54] (typically other cabinets, other POP's in the datacenter, etc) [13:54] well dedicated bandwidth capacity on demand [13:54] is that like a dedicated link or vpn between datacenters [13:54] so like say arp wanted to get gigabit to ams-ix [13:54] they could just fire it up, [13:55] then say they want to upgrade to 2 gigabit they could just raise it [13:55] then 3 .. [13:55] Well the idea of an "Elastic Interconnect" is just that, but "cloud scale" (they have the infrastructure and turn on the right switches to bring you traffic) [13:55] yeah it's like mpls [13:55] ahh, that makes more sense [13:55] It's really nothing new, what they're selling, just buzz-wordier [13:55] so there'll just be /30 at each [13:55] And possibly using fancy new tech like SDN [13:55] err at each end, and you won't see the inbetween hops [13:56] potentially bryce [13:56] but not necessarily. [13:56] mercutio: "And *possibly* using..." [13:56] yeh [13:56] i'm agreeing with you but rewording, sorry :) [13:57] Whether or not they use the tech and buzzwords they throw around on their website, who really knows (besides them) [13:57] it's not meant to matter [13:57] you the consumer are meant to just eat what they serve [13:57] Unless you're the type of customer that wants to be using the hippest new thing. [13:57] i'm not a huge fan of sdn yet :) [13:57] In which case yeah you go with the provider that uses $HipThing [13:58] but i am thinking that having open source switches is a wonderful idea [13:58] someone does linux based switches/routers already [13:58] cant remember the name [13:58] mnathani_: a few do [13:58] most are vxworks though [13:58] so you can install apps and do like gigabit captures eetc [13:58] Anyone can, you can start with just openvswitch and a grapload of NICs [13:59] *crapload [13:59] brycec: you run out of pci-e lanes quickly [13:59] you can't do 48 10gbe ports on a pc :) [13:59] Depends on the scale of switch you're looking to do :p [13:59] I think it was arista: https://eos.arista.com/linux-as-a-switch-operating-system-five-lessons-learned/ [13:59] and if want to do gbe why bother? [14:00] For that matter, I have come across quad-NIC cards that can switch on-board, simply controlled by the host [14:01] yeah that's a good way to go [14:01] So you can have 40GBps fabric among 5 ports, but if you have to packet switch to another card, you chew up host bus bandwidth [14:01] But I'm not in that world, these days, nor do I need anything truly fancy like SDN. So meh. [14:01] 40gbe is actually a little hard [14:02] 100gbe i think you'd really struggle to do on anything right now [14:02] pci-e3 x16 would be kind of near it's limits [14:02] pci-e 3.0 [14:03] well i mean to really push it to it's limits :) [14:03] *its [14:03] true [14:05] 40gbe is coming down in cost though [14:10] what do you do with 40gbe if your disks (ssd based) can't support that throughput [14:10] then you buy more disks [14:10] nvme ssd's do like 2 gigabytes/sec read [14:10] but right now 40gbe is usually used for aggregation [14:11] pushing over 10gbe isn't that hard, but running 40gbe to it's limit is a bit harder [14:15] http://www.mellanox.com/page/products_dyn?product_family=201& [17:16] *** plett has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 246 seconds) [17:16] *** plett has joined #arpnetworks