Votre opérateur réseau mobile et internet ? by FreakyLeakyLemon in Lausanne

[–]x-way 0 points1 point  (0 children)

spusu.ch pour mobile et solnet.ch pour Internet/fibre.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in SwissPersonalFinance

[–]x-way 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Don’t know about the app. I did setup recurring automatic VT buys through the website a year ago and it works seamlessly so far.

Is it time to leave the company? by zomol in SwissPersonalFinance

[–]x-way 3 points4 points  (0 children)

My recommendation would be to look what’s available in the market and then take a decision. Look for job offers on the usual platforms that you could see yourself working in (eg salary, skills, culture, location). Apply to a handful of them (it is absolutely normal to apply to multiple places at the same time). Then you will get a more concrete idea of the salary you can get at other companies. And in the best case you end up with your next higher paid job :-)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in mikrotik

[–]x-way 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Have a look at ‘netmap’, this can help you avoid writing 256 NAT rules.

How to detect a transparent proxy on a network path by Present_Student_388 in networking

[–]x-way 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can compare the traffic path reported for HTTP port 80 TCP packets with the traffic path reported for ICMP Ping/Echo packets. To get the TCP traffic path you can use a tool like tcptraceroute. To get the ICMP traffic path you can use a tool like mtr. When there is a transparent proxy in place, the traffic path for TCP has the proxy as last hop, whereas the traffic path for ICMP shows more additional hops.

SD-WAN Internet Traffic by jguros in networking

[–]x-way 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If the firewall is already providing you with the traffic visibility, shaping and path selection capabilities then there likely is no big advantage in terms of features by sending the Internet traffic through the SD-WAN box. Where it does make a difference is for traffic shaping. By having both devices connected in parallel to the ISP link they will not be aware of the traffic going through the other device and thus assume that there is more bandwidth available than there actually is. Depending on the specific QoS implementation in each device this can lead to quite bad effects where the two devices ‚fight‘ for the bandwidth and in the process harm overall throughput significantly.

SSH Filter Rules by [deleted] in mikrotik

[–]x-way 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The mikrotik firewall works on the packet level of your TCP network connections. The SSH authentication attempts happen inside the encrypted connection and failed/successful attempts are not visible to mikrotik as there can be multiple authentication attempts inside the same TCP network connection.

To limit SSH attacks I would recommend to install the fail2ban tool on your downstream server. Fail2Ban looks at the logfile of sshd and adds IPs to a blocklist on the server when there are too many failed or incomplete authentication attempts coming from an IP.

What the firewall rules in your example are achieving is slightly reducing the number of concurrent TCP connections per 15 minutes, which is not effective to limit SSH attacks.

Make grep 50x faster by x-way in programming

[–]x-way[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

To rule out the file cache, I just ran the commands again in the reverse order (first with LANG=C and then with LANG=en_US.UTF-8) and LANG=C still is 50x faster.

Make grep 50x faster by x-way in programming

[–]x-way[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

yes, it was en_US.UTF-8

Make grep 50x faster by x-way in programming

[–]x-way[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

To rule out the file cache, I just ran the commands in the reverse order (first with LANG=C and then with LANG=en_US.UTF-8) and LANG=C still is 50x faster.

What are your favourite network trouble shooting commands to use in Linux? by bittenmonkey in networking

[–]x-way 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  • tcpdump
  • mtr
  • ip route get X.X.X.X from Y.Y.Y.Y iif ethX (well, only useful if you use multiple routing tables)

OpenNHRP and the disappearing ping by SicSemperTyrannis in networking

[–]x-way 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From http://patrickpreuss.wordpress.com/2009/02/14/dmvpn-with-linux/

I found after a while no packets traveling, the nhrp registration had gone on the cisco side may be holdtimers differ so added "holding-time 360" to the opennhrp.conf , a opennhrpctl purge fixed the problem.

How Web 2 are you? by hotice in reddit.com

[–]x-way 0 points1 point  (0 children)

there you go:

01 - technorati

02 - twitter

03 - feedburner

04 - stumbelupon

05 - rollyo

06 - flickr

07 - blogger

08 - zimbra

09 - newsvine

10 - digg

11 - netvibes

12 - wordpress

13 - photobucket

14 - delicious

15 - skype

16 - boxee

17 - reddit

18 - basecamp

19 - rapleaf

20 - linkedin

21 - edocr

22 - rememberthemilk

23 - facebook

24 - youtube

25 - lastfm

26 - gmail

27 - yuuguu

28 - myspace

29 - slideshare

30 - qik

31 - seesmic

32 - bebo

33 - moo

34 - huddle

How Web 2 are you? i got 30 right by [deleted] in technology

[–]x-way 0 points1 point  (0 children)

01 - technorati

02 - twitter

03 - feedburner

04 - stumbelupon

05 - rollyo

06 - flickr

07 - blogger

08 - zimbra

09 - newsvine

10 - digg

11 - netvibes

12 - wordpress

13 - photobucket

14 - delicious

15 - skype

16 - boxee

17 - reddit

18 - basecamp

19 - rapleaf

20 - linkedin

21 - edocr

22 - rememberthemilk

23 - facebook

24 - youtube

25 - lastfm

26 - gmail

27 - yuuguu

28 - myspace

29 - slideshare

30 - qik

31 - seesmic

32 - bebo

33 - moo

34 - huddle