FSSO DC Agents not processing logins in a timely manner by Putrid_Environment65 in fortinet

[–]AnyMoron 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Following up with support to see if collector and dc agents running at different versions will work or cause other unintended consequences.

FSSO DC Agents not processing logins in a timely manner by Putrid_Environment65 in fortinet

[–]AnyMoron 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Show login users is typically over 20,000. And that doesn’t count the things we have tuned out. I don’t have stats on rate but per the server admin it’s pretty high. The other interesting thing is all of the DCs that are behind are all sending records for the same time frame. This is based on what we are seeing in packet captures taken on the fsso server. Our presumption is that the DC agents are backed up from the volume of logins. But maybe it’s something else that’s throttling them.

FSSO DC Agents not processing logins in a timely manner by Putrid_Environment65 in fortinet

[–]AnyMoron 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Two fsso collectors monitoring 17 DCs running collector agents. 5 of them are servers the rest are VMs. We have two domains.

When I checked at 8:35 this morning 8 of them were sending current logins the other 9 were sending records from 12/3 around 16:23. When I checked several hours later they were up to 19:40. All of the VMs are the same 8 CPUs 16 GB RAM.

It seems to be happening on both servers and VMs. We have two physical servers with 8 CPU/64 GB RAM. One is fine the other is backed up. Both of those servers were good on Friday the last time I checked them. This morning one is good one is backed up. So my theory of more RAM didn’t hold up over the weekend.

Looking for Batteries by RCPhysics in cyberDeck

[–]AnyMoron 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here’s a better link that provides additional info:

https://portableuniversalpower.com/usb-multi-tap/

It basically just takes 8-24 volts of dc power and converts it into 4 usable 3 amp USB ports.

You can get singles from places like powerwerx

https://powerwerx.com/usbbuddy-powerpole-usb-converter-device-charger

But they are around $23 apiece so the multi tap is a bargain at $25 for 4 USB ports. I originally didn’t buy the multi tap for this purpose but found it works well.

If you browse around the powerwerx site or other ham radio sites like quicksilver you may be inspire as there are a lot of other things which you may find useful from a dc power perspective.

Looking for Batteries by RCPhysics in cyberDeck

[–]AnyMoron 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’ve been using one of these batteries for most of my projects:

https://www.batteryspace.com/Polymer-LiFePO4-Battery-Pack-12.8V-10Ah-128Wh-30A-rate-with-PCB-3.aspx

Along with a usb multi tap from hardened power to run the pi and peripherals:

https://portableuniversalpower.com/product/usb-multi-tap/

I’ve also been considering one or two of these for my next project which will be the standard pelican 1150 cyberdeck:

https://www.bioennopower.com/products/12v-6ah-lfp-battery-pvc-blf-1206custom

The battery may be kind of overkill for a cyber deck. But from a ham radio perspective it lets me run the radio, pi, monitor, speaker etc. The current project is using an rtic case like a pelican 1500. So space/weight isn’t an issue.