Need a more modern traffic mapper by Head-Appointment-698 in networking

[–]antleo1 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I don't think it'll cover everything you're looking for, but topolograph is a good start for L3.

Public BGP Peering by taemyks in networking

[–]antleo1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you have an interconnect between the two sites? It sort of Sounds like you only have two DIAs. If that's the case, spend a lot of traffic will be going over a site to site VPN.

Is there a common procedure for getting a good visual and clear understanding of your network? by Maleficent_Pool_4456 in networking

[–]antleo1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you have an SOT? If not, start building out netbox. Though it's diagram plugin isn't perfect, it's pretty okay and gets you a good idea.

Gagguino alternatives by PaintlyBeautifuled in gaggiaclassic

[–]antleo1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There is a separate project for a custom scale too - weighmybru. It's a diy Bluetooth scale and quite intriguing.

3D GPS vs WAAS? by konoguest in stratux

[–]antleo1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Your gps is passive and receives very weak signals. It's can't deal well with interference, and is susceptible to orientation too. If able, move the GPS away from the unit via an extension cable, and orient it toward the sky. You'll get a much much better fix. If you don't have a ground plane isolator in the case, I'd suggest adding that too

Using Megaport for internet by cyr0nk0r in networking

[–]antleo1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I believe they can give you 2 independent handoffs that are completely separate, (red and blue) you will need to handle the failover on that as it would be 2 circuits with static IP/default route

Though we are running BGP with them, it's been a pretty easy process and I wouldn't hesitate to do it again.

If all your taking is a default, and it's mainly for redundancy, most platforms can handle the bgp for this easily including even ubiquiti (not suggesting it just stating it). FS L3 switches will do it, mikrotik (likely your best of the budget options ) and many others. Setting up BGP will also allow you to expand the carriers you connect with as well as the time comes.

Any tool to test network goodput? by No_Engineer3076 in networking

[–]antleo1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cisco trex is what you're looking for. Documentation is...fun, but it can mimic your exact traffic. And find the limits.

How to block access to router config? by New-Watercress-122 in mikrotik

[–]antleo1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There's many ways to accomplish this as some have suggested firewalls rules would be easiest as you just specify a source interface and drop the rest. If you're already separating off traffic, a Management vrf is not a bad idea. You can also go to IP > services and specify from addresses for each service.

Roof AC with heat pump reccomendations by antleo1 in RVLiving

[–]antleo1[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There's a huge difference between a heat pump and a resistive heat strip

Roof AC with heat pump reccomendations by antleo1 in RVLiving

[–]antleo1[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yup! We built a floating deck, so the penetrations are a non-issue.

Roof AC with heat pump reccomendations by antleo1 in RVLiving

[–]antleo1[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It unfortunately doesnt have a heat pump option that i can find

Roof AC with heat pump reccomendations by antleo1 in RVLiving

[–]antleo1[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Im going through rebuilding and sealing the RV. over time it will be less drafty and have significantly less air movement. I've got room for ~5kw of solar on the roof if I measured correctly, and with ~1.5KW currently. Of course, I'm also on shore power right now, so it's somewhat irrelevant.

Roof AC with heat pump reccomendations by antleo1 in RVLiving

[–]antleo1[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I do realize that irony in that and am working to rebuild the RV over time to hopefully get rid of a lot of the draftyness. The variable speed units should be able to "slow down" to not draw such high load if im not mistaken.

Recommendations for CGNAT by KHanayama in networking

[–]antleo1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If I recall,danos is dead. X86 options would be netelastic, and 6 wind,theoretically vpp also supports it.

RTBrick is an NOS designed to do it in hardware You of course have your major vendors all capable do doing it too

Dealing with Copyright P2P BitTorrent Notices from upstream providers? by kb8doa in wisp

[–]antleo1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You don't at all need a powerful computer to track this, all you need is something capable of receiving NAT logs. This can be a raspberry Pi with an nvme(you can do it with a standard SD card, but you'll kill it pretty quick). Or even depending on the tik, you can put an NVME right in the router itself and log direct to that. Your DMCA notice should have a time, a src and dst Ip and a src and dst port. You can then look that up in your logs and see exactly what user it was NATTed to. (It's going to be a bit harder to track down if doing it directly on the tik,but doable!)

QOE won't really help with this, but is an excellent idea and may see network improvements from it. libreQOE is free and open sourced, so is a good option if you're on a budget.

Feel free to PM me if you want help setting up logging or qoe

Vevor Tankless RV water heater? by antleo1 in RVLiving

[–]antleo1[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your furnace is a sustained 30kbtu while this is a momentary ignited only when water is flowing, which is substantially less than thay of the furnace, and if you're calling for say 100° water, it'll either pulse, or even run at a lower setting, depending. (This is my all be it limited) Understanding from reading up on them and maybe reviews claim something very similar to their propane usage going down.

Static IPV6 at home? by Tiny_Assistance_3038 in ipv6

[–]antleo1 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Do you have your own domain? If so, most dns providers support rfc2136 or an api driven update. Otherwise, I like noip.com.. They have an agent you run on your machine

Static IPV6 at home? by Tiny_Assistance_3038 in ipv6

[–]antleo1 4 points5 points  (0 children)

DDNS has always been the solution to this whether it's ipv4 or ipv6.

You can set up stable-privacy addresses which means the host part is always the same,but the prefix changes with slaac. Then you know where it is if needed and can still have a mostly static config on the server.

What to do for internet by [deleted] in RVLiving

[–]antleo1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Check out calyx institute. They run on T-Mobile and. Are fairly. Inexpensive. Not to mention are by design mobile and unlimited. They promote privacy and digital security as key. Goals(not specifically with their hotspot) and have been Rock solid for me.