[AusNOG] Optus fibre service

2018-12-13 Thread Chris Hurley
Hi all, I have a client who currently has Telstra Fibre into their business but being approached by Optus with their Evolve Fibre 50mbps 1:1 Unlimited product. Client also needs transfer their /24 anyone had problems with this product or advertising routes? Regards, Chris Hurley BE (Elec)

[AusNOG] ASC Vocus Cable Down

2018-12-13 Thread Bradley Amm
Looks like ASC is down between Indonesia and Singapore Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone. ___ AusNOG mailing list AusNOG@lists.ausnog.net http://lists.ausnog.net/mailman/listinfo/ausnog

Re: [AusNOG] Not learning 123.210.0.0/15 from Telstra Domestic peers

2018-12-13 Thread Mark Duffell
Hi Patrick, I’ll contact you off-list to discuss. Regards, Mark Sent from my iPhone > On 14 Dec 2018, at 09:09, Patrick Ohearn wrote: > > Hi List, > > Is anyone else not learning 123.210.0.0/15 from their domestic sessions with > 1221? > > From looking at AAPT's LG and route view's for

Re: [AusNOG] Not learning 123.210.0.0/15 from Telstra Domestic peers

2018-12-13 Thread Florian Valette
Hi, Same for us: https://lg.ovh.net/prefix_bgpmap/syd1/ipv4?q=123.210.0.0/15 Regards, -- Florian Valette [signature_393040590] Email: florian.vale...@corp.ovh.com -- OVH

[AusNOG] Not learning 123.210.0.0/15 from Telstra Domestic peers

2018-12-13 Thread Patrick Ohearn
Hi List, Is anyone else not learning 123.210.0.0/15 from their domestic sessions with 1221? >From looking at AAPT's LG and route view's for Optus, it looks like they are not sending it to their domestic peers either. This is a residential NBN range AFAIK, and is entirely a domestic prefix I

Re: [AusNOG] [AUSNog] : Re Data Centre Fire Suppression Safety

2018-12-13 Thread Matthew Moyle-Croft
CO2 is popular in some markets - eg. Japan still. I’ve talked to operators there and they seem pretty confident in it. Halon is definitely a thing for certain tasks - my Dad at one point was responsible (well, people who reported to him were) for an irreplaceable historic collection and they

Re: [AusNOG] [AUSNog] : Re Data Centre Fire Suppression Safety

2018-12-13 Thread James Hodgkinson
I can confirm a similar incident not in Sydney. It was later confirmed that the noise was the contributing factor to the disk death. James On Fri, 14 Dec 2018, at 07:32, Robert Hudson wrote: > Not sure. Some of the wordage indicates it may be a separate incident > (albeit at a similar time)...>

Re: [AusNOG] [AUSNog] : Re Data Centre Fire Suppression Safety

2018-12-13 Thread Robert Hudson
Not sure. Some of the wordage indicates it may be a separate incident (albeit at a similar time)... On Fri, 14 Dec. 2018, 7:50 am Simon Sharwood > https://www.theregister.co.uk/AMP/2014/02/04/loud_data_centre_gas_release_sounds_harm_disks/ > was it this one Robert? >

Re: [AusNOG] [AUSNog] : Re Data Centre Fire Suppression Safety

2018-12-13 Thread John Edwards
FM200 residue is mostly all of the gunk and grease in the pipes left over from their manufacture and threaded-metal-fitting assembly. John > On 14 Dec 2018, at 4:31 am, Bevan Slattery wrote: > > It’s pretty much all been said. > > Halon (long gone). Reaction sucks oxygen out of air. > FM200

Re: [AusNOG] [AUSNog] : Re Data Centre Fire Suppression Safety

2018-12-13 Thread James Troy
I too can confirm this when a staff member ‘accidentally’ hit the gas release instead of the door release. We ended up having to replace 80% of our SAN’s disks due to both failure and predictive failure. >From what I can determine the gas nozzles is what dictates the noise variable >and the

Re: [AusNOG] [AUSNog] : Re Data Centre Fire Suppression Safety

2018-12-13 Thread Simon Sharwood
https://www.theregister.co.uk/AMP/2014/02/04/loud_data_centre_gas_release_sounds_harm_disks/ was it this one Robert? From: AusNOG on behalf of Robert Hudson Sent: Friday, December 14, 2018 7:45:06 AM To: Bevan Slattery Cc: AusNOG@lists.ausnog.net Subject: Re:

Re: [AusNOG] [AUSNog] : Re Data Centre Fire Suppression Safety

2018-12-13 Thread Robert Hudson
I can confirm that the sound/pressure wave from a gas discharge can, does and absolutely did destroy a lot of spinning disks in some very expensive kit (big data and database appliances) when such a system was accidently deployed in a datacentre I am familiar with. On Fri, 14 Dec. 2018, 5:02 am

Re: [AusNOG] [AUSNog] : Re Data Centre Fire Suppression Safety

2018-12-13 Thread Mark Smith
On the other end of the scale is how you intentionally destroy your data in a hurry in a DC. "DEF CON 23 - Zoz - And That's How I Lost My Other Eye...Explorations in Data Destruction (Fixed) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-bpX8YvNg6Y On Fri, 14 Dec 2018 at 05:02, Bevan Slattery wrote: > >

Re: [AusNOG] [AUSNog] : Re Data Centre Fire Suppression Safety

2018-12-13 Thread Bevan Slattery
It’s pretty much all been said. Halon (long gone). Reaction sucks oxygen out of air. FM200 (safe but being phased out). Heard it can leave a residue despite the brochure saying not. Inergen more common (and others like it). Fundamentally mostly nitrogen that drops oxygen below 15% and drops

Re: [AusNOG] [AUSNog] : Re Data Centre Fire Suppression Safety

2018-12-13 Thread Alan Maher
Co2 was the original choice for fire problems in early data centres. Then... they found a few problems. Number one problem was that Co2 was so cold it not only put put the fire, but it completely destroyed all the circuit boards. They cracked and so did the computers. Plan B was Halon, and