On Mon, Jan 12, 2015 at 7:50 AM, Kelly Dean wrote:
> I haven't tried this, or looked at the code. I'm just going by the
> description at:
> https://www.fossil-scm.org/index.html/doc/tip/www/password.wiki
>
> In the ‟Sync Protocol Authentication” section, it calls the sha1 hash of
> the request co
Andy Bradford wrote:
> I can set up all kind of QoS on my firewall, but most devices don't
> allow one to request random and routine packet loss and actual
> connection resets (e.g. TCP/IP RST packets) as part of the QoS settings.
> ;-)
Just hurl a few gratuitous insults at some bor
I haven't tried this, or looked at the code. I'm just going by the description
at:
https://www.fossil-scm.org/index.html/doc/tip/www/password.wiki
In the ‟Sync Protocol Authentication” section, it calls the sha1 hash of the
request content a ‟nonce”. But that isn't a nonce; if the client were to
Thus said Stephan Beal on Mon, 12 Jan 2015 02:06:30 +0100:
> Seems i can only set "high" and "low" priority, but some boxes may
> allow more details setup.
I can set up all kind of QoS on my firewall, but most devices don't
allow one to request random and routine packet loss and
Thus said Kelly Dean on Sun, 11 Jan 2015 21:37:12 +:
> Just ask your ISP or network administrator to lower your quality of
> service, or try using wifi while a large number of microwave ovens are
> operating nearby.
Wifi with a microwave would have been much easier than what I was doing!
I
On Sun, Jan 11, 2015 at 10:37 PM, Kelly Dean wrote:
> Just ask your ISP or network administrator to lower your quality of service
Actually... some WLAN boxes let you change QoS settings. Mine lets me set
up per-device/per-service rules for traffic priority. Seems i can only set
"high" and "low"
On Monday 29 Dec 2014 06:30:58 Richard Hipp wrote:
> Unfortunately, there is no way to do this for every check-in all at once.
> You would have to go through and create separate tags for each check-in.
> There is probably a way to script this. But it would be better to change
> the names in git pr
Andy Bradford wrote:
> This explanation seems to fit the facts, but
> reproducing it is a pain.
>
> Let me see if I can cause what I've just stated above to happen.
Just ask your ISP or network administrator to lower your quality of service, or
try using wifi while a large number of microwave ov
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