Re: Software Defined Networks
On Thu 5. Dec 2019 at 20:38, Töma Gavrichenkov wrote: > Peace, On Wed, Dec 4, 2019, 9:26 PM Ishmael Rufus wrote: > You can start by taking a look at Openflow which embraces the SDN concept. > > Please do not So does anyone still wonder why we have so few women in our field? Real nice, Töma. @moderators, can we have a comment from you please about the acceptability of the language used here? Nick > -- -- Nick
Re: fuzzy subnet aggregation
> On 27. Oct 2019, at 20:36, Joe Maimon wrote: > > Not quite. > > 203.0.113.1 > 203.0.113.3 > 203.0.113.5 > 203.0.112.6 > 203.0.112.7 > > Will aggregate to 203.0.113.0/29 if you dont mind the missing 3 addresses > in the unaggregated list. > > Hence, fuzzy aggregation. Could you describe the problem again? I’m interested, but I’m not sure that I quite understand what you want to do :-) were the last two addresses supposed to have 112 in the third octet? Nick
Re: Weekly Routing Table Report
> On 2. Sep 2019, at 15:49, Valdis Klētnieks wrote: > > *plonk* (the sound of an email address dropping into a not-often-used ignore > file) mmhmm nice nerd burn. ouchie.
Re: Sflow billing or usage calculation software
> On 16. Apr 2019, at 00:21, Deepak Jain wrote: > > I'm only aware of Sflow being IP/protocol/etc aware. Actually the sflow standard is flexible, and there are many fields widely available, including input interface and output interface, vlan/vxlan/mpls headers, etc. The sending device just needs to support the fields. To give you an idea of some of the fields you can query from a TS server for example, here’s a description of one of the tables in the database: https://inmon.com/sentinel_help/8.0/help/en/report/api_view_traffic.shtml Browse sflow.org for more fun info, including ideas for running sflow agents on your hypervisors (for eg correlating CPU and RAM usage per VM) etc :-) Nick
Re: Sflow billing or usage calculation software
On 14. Apr 2019, at 13:28, Tony C wrote: > > Please keep the suggestions coming. I’ve had good results using Traffic Sentinel from Inmon. It’s got a nice queriable database backend and you don’t have to do much manual setup to get good results. The UI feels a bit 1995, but it works, and the API is practical and useful. It’s quite fast, too. They can probably give you trial licenses to see if it works for you. Nick
Re: DNS Qtypes and class values are a social construct
On Mon, 1 Apr 2019 at 18:09, Alfie Pates wrote: > I feel this comes off as poking fun at trans people, women, and earnest > attempts to combat what are actual problems in our industry, more than it > pokes fun at the industry itself which is what a good April Fool should do > - this feels more like laughing at "outsiders" more than laughing at > ourselves. > > I think this is pretty tone-deaf, in my opinion. > Completely agree, Alfie. (And hi, nanog, I'm Nick. Do we do introduction rounds here?) Nick