Scott,
Looks like IPv6 connectivity to mirror.hosef.org is restored. However,
the FTP daemon isn't accepting connections over IPv6.
$ ping6 -c 3 mirror.hosef.org
PING6(56=40+8+8 bytes) 2001:1888::a:214:51ff:fe29:1e4e --
2607:f278:4101:12:204:76ff:fef1:edc8
16 bytes from
On Thu, May 6, 2010 at 12:23 AM, Antonio Querubin t...@lava.net wrote:
Scott,
Looks like IPv6 connectivity to mirror.hosef.org is restored. However, the
FTP daemon isn't accepting connections over IPv6.
Thanks, Tony. We use vsftp, and this variable is controlled by the
listen setting. I had
Well the good news is that once I can get some reviews of some gig switches
done, I can upgrade that link to gig. I just don't have any spare gig
switches laying around. Due to limited rack space, I need at least 24 ports
and once the reviews are done, voila...
/brian chee
On 5/6/10 9:06 AM,
On Thu, 6 May 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
Thanks, Tony. We use vsftp, and this variable is controlled by the
listen setting. I had
#listen_ipv6=YES
commented out for obvious reasons. It is now active and has replaced
Thanks. You might also want to take a look at ftp.hosef.org. Is that
On Thu, May 6, 2010 at 9:33 AM, Antonio Querubin t...@lava.net wrote:
Thanks. You might also want to take a look at ftp.hosef.org. Is that
supposed to point at mirror.hosef.org or to the website?
That is at Dreamhost where hosef.org is hosted. It's never been part
of our naming scheme for
On Thu, 6 May 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
That is at Dreamhost where hosef.org is hosted. It's never been part
of our naming scheme for the mirror.
I use lighttpd, not apache, and, I don't understand why I want to do
this. It seems to add more layers of complexity. We only host
It was a
On Thu, May 6, 2010 at 10:21 AM, Antonio Querubin t...@lava.net wrote:
On Thu, 6 May 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
That is at Dreamhost where hosef.org is hosted. It's never been part
of our naming scheme for the mirror.
I use lighttpd, not apache, and, I don't understand why I want to do
On Thu, 6 May 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
To ease management and to facilitate uptime, I moved www.hosef.org,
hosef.org, and lists.hosef.org to Dreamhost a few years ago. Before
your direction, I had not really considered IPv6 or what I was
supposed to do about it. Now that mirrors is
On Thu, May 6, 2010 at 10:42 AM, Antonio Querubin t...@lava.net wrote:
On Thu, 6 May 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
To ease management and to facilitate uptime, I moved www.hosef.org,
hosef.org, and lists.hosef.org to Dreamhost a few years ago. Before
your direction, I had not really
On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 7:54 PM, Antonio Querubin t...@lava.net wrote:
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010, Brian Chee wrote:
Well how about I explore this when I get back from InteropITS turned
on
ipv6 for my vlan and I'm no longer 100% sure I have autoconfig? The config
might be assuming that I'm
R. Scott Belford wrote:
On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 7:54 PM, Antonio Querubin t...@lava.net wrote:
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010, Brian Chee wrote:
Well how about I explore this when I get back from InteropITS turned
on
ipv6 for my vlan and I'm no longer 100% sure I have autoconfig? The config
might be
On Tue, Apr 27, 2010 at 9:21 AM, Antonio Querubin t...@lava.net wrote:
Ubuntu has IPv6 turned on by default but perhaps the built-in firewall is
blocking IPv6 access and/or the daemon configs have reverted to IPv4-only
access? The IPv4 and IPv6 traceroutes differ only by 1 hop so I'm assuming
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
On Tue, Apr 27, 2010 at 9:21 AM, Antonio Querubin t...@lava.net wrote:
Ubuntu has IPv6 turned on by default but perhaps the built-in firewall is
blocking IPv6 access and/or the daemon configs have reverted to IPv4-only
access? The IPv4 and IPv6
On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 10:01 AM, Antonio Querubin t...@lava.net wrote:
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
[642021.291876] TCP: Treason uncloaked! Peer
::::::da1c:1ec6:46936/80 shrinks window
the issue may be solved. Please let me know so that I can
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
which is a lot. I have observed from superficially reading the above that
the MAC could be at play. Our address in DNS looks like
this, 2607:f278:4101:12:204:76ff:fef1:edc8 , and I think there are some MAC
numbers here.
If you changed your ethernet
On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 10:21 AM, Antonio Querubin t...@lava.net wrote:
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
which is a lot. I have observed from superficially reading the above that
the MAC could be at play. Our address in DNS looks like
this, 2607:f278:4101:12:204:76ff:fef1:edc8 ,
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:04:76:f1:ed:c8
inet addr:128.171.104.136 Bcast:128.171.104.255
Mask:255.255.255.0
inet6 addr: 2607:f278:4101:12:204:76ff:fef1:edc8/64 Scope:Global
inet6 addr:
On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 11:13 AM, Antonio Querubin t...@lava.net wrote:
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:04:76:f1:ed:c8
inet addr:128.171.104.136 Bcast:128.171.104.255
Mask:255.255.255.0
inet6 addr:
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
points me to how to deal with this. However, it still appears to be pebcak,
and it may be as simple as not defining the IPv6 address in
/etc/network/interfaces as I am now reading. Now to determine the gateway,
and we should be good to go. Without
On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 1:03 PM, Antonio Querubin t...@lava.net wrote:
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
points me to how to deal with this. However, it still appears to be
pebcak,
and it may be as simple as not defining the IPv6 address in
/etc/network/interfaces as I am now
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
This is a good one. We have an OS change, same NIC, all other variables the
same. I think I need a static entry in /etc/network/interfaces and that this
was something automagically handled by centos. It sounds like I don't need a
gateway setting,
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
This is a good one. We have an OS change, same NIC, all other variables the
same. I think I need a static entry in /etc/network/interfaces and that
this
was something automagically handled by centos. It sounds like I don't need
a
gateway setting,
On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 1:29 PM, Antonio Querubin t...@lava.net wrote:
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
This is a good one. We have an OS change, same NIC, all other variables
the
same. I think I need a static entry in /etc/network/interfaces and that
this
was something
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
mirror:/etc/network# netstat -rnA inet6
Kernel IPv6 routing table
DestinationNext Hop Flag Met Ref Use If
2607:f278:4101:12::/64 :: UAe 256 0 5009 eth0
fe80::/64
On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 2:09 PM, Antonio Querubin t...@lava.net wrote:
And what does traceroute6 show to various hosts (eg. freebsd.org, isc.org,
lava.net)? You may find one of the two gateways is not routing properly. If
that's the case, specify -g in traceroute6 and see which one works.
I
On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 2:22 PM, R. Scott Belford sc...@belford.net wrote:
On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 2:09 PM, Antonio Querubin t...@lava.net wrote:
And what does traceroute6 show to various hosts (eg. freebsd.org, isc.org,
lava.net)? You may find one of the two gateways is not routing properly.
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
I think it's a matter of adding these lines to my /etc/sysctl.conf
net.ipv6.conf.default.autoconf = 1
net.ipv6.conf.default.accept_ra = 1
Doubtful. IPv6 autoconfig is already working. Otherwise you would not
have the default gateways in your
Also, you should verify your various daemons are actually configured to
listen on IPv6. Try localhost first.
ftp ::1
telnet ::1 smtp
ssh ::1
curl -v ::1
Repeat with your public IPv6 address.
Antonio Querubin
808-545-5282 x3003
e-mail/xmpp: t...@lava.net
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010, Antonio Querubin wrote:
Also, you should verify your various daemons are actually configured to
listen on IPv6. Try localhost first.
ftp ::1
telnet ::1 smtp
ssh ::1
curl -v ::1
Oops. Change that last one to just 'telnet ::1 http'.
Repeat with your public IPv6
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010, Antonio Querubin wrote:
curl -v ::1
Correct syntax using curl is: curl -v '\[::1\]'
Literal IPv6 addresses in URIs need to be surrounded by brackets to
distinguish the address from the port number.
Antonio Querubin
808-545-5282 x3003
e-mail/xmpp: t...@lava.net
Tracing route to mirror.hosef.org [2607:f278:4101:12:204:76ff:fef1:edc8]
from 2001:1888:0:3:34a0:a92b:52bd:9f7e over a maximum of 30 hops:
1 1 ms1 ms1 ms apapane-fe0-0-3.lava.net
[2001:1888:0:3:2b0:c2ff:feea:bc00]
21 ms 1 ms 1 ms iiwi-fe-0-0-1.lava.net
On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 6:39 PM, Antonio Querubin t...@lava.net wrote:
Tracing route to mirror.hosef.org [2607:f278:4101:12:204:76ff:fef1:edc8]
from 2001:1888:0:3:34a0:a92b:52bd:9f7e over a maximum of 30 hops:
1 1 ms 1 ms 1 ms apapane-fe0-0-3.lava.net
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010, Brian Chee wrote:
Well how about I explore this when I get back from InteropITS turned on
ipv6 for my vlan and I'm no longer 100% sure I have autoconfig? The config
might be assuming that I'm routing ipv6 myself.
Autoconfig is apparently working but it's beginning to
On Mon, 26 Apr 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
On Mon, Apr 26, 2010 at 11:20 AM, Antonio Querubin t...@lava.net wrote:
BTW, what's up with the broken IPv6 access? I can't even ping to the IPv6
address anymore.
That's a function of a nearly seamless upgrade of our HW RAID5 / array
powered
On Sun, Apr 25, 2010 at 8:18 PM, Brian Chee c...@hawaii.edu wrote:
So does the HOSEF mirror have access via plain old vanilla anonynmous FTP?
I need to push an Ubuntu/debian/centos (I care not which) up onto my VMWare
ESX server, but it needs to be either FTP or sFTP since I¹m coming in from
Ok kewl...but to get the .iso into the VMWare system (without the GUI making
my life miserable) I need traditional FTP from the command lineso if
HOSEF's mirror has this, what address do I use?
Mirrors.hosef.org and ftp.hosef.org refuse connection from my FTP client.
/brian chee
On
2010/4/25 Brian Chee c...@hawaii.edu
Ok kewl...but to get the .iso into the VMWare system (without the GUI
making
my life miserable) I need traditional FTP from the command lineso if
HOSEF's mirror has this, what address do I use?
Mirrors.hosef.org and ftp.hosef.org refuse connection
My 2 guesses are you are running into some active/passive FTP chicanery or
trying to hit the IPv6 address and not falling back on the IPv4 address.
-Vince
2010/4/25 Brian Chee c...@hawaii.edu
Ok kewl...but to get the .iso into the VMWare system (without the GUI
making
my life miserable) I
On Sun, 25 Apr 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
Yes. Debian and CentOS are available via anonymous FTP and HTTP. The Ubuntu
CD Images have just been made available, and I am currently at
/universe/pool/s/ in the rsync rebuild of the Ubuntu repository. It should
be live within 4 or 5 hours.
I have
DunnoI've NOT changed anything on the IPv6 side...autoconfig should
still be active on my net. Worst case I've got a /60 that's carved up and we
could route ipv6...
/brian chee
On 4/26/10 2:20 PM, Antonio Querubin t...@lava.net wrote:
On Sun, 25 Apr 2010, R. Scott Belford wrote:
Yes.
On Mon, Apr 26, 2010 at 11:20 AM, Antonio Querubin t...@lava.net wrote:
BTW, what's up with the broken IPv6 access? I can't even ping to the IPv6
address anymore.
Antonio Querubin
808-545-5282 x3003
e-mail/xmpp: t...@lava.net
That's a function of a nearly seamless upgrade of our HW
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