On 6/25/16 4:41 PM, Michael Rasmussen wrote:
> On Sat, Jun 25, 2016 at 03:47:18PM -0500, Louis Kowolowski wrote:
>>> Regarding XFS, why would you need ways to zero out data? I
>>> thought the whole point was to keep the data…isn’t that why we’re
>>> storing it? I mean…srsly.
> To prevent those that
Is this linux forum? Did I miss something?
On Friday, June 24, 2016 11:20:26 PM r...@dimstar.net wrote:
> > On Jun 24, 2016, at 9:49 PM, Tomas Kuchta
> > wrote:
> >
> > Just wondering - Would you share how do you mount SMB in user space?
> > I mean mount not type smb://serverName/dir into some s
On Saturday, June 25, 2016 12:26:59 PM wes wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 24, 2016 at 9:49 PM, Tomas Kuchta
> wrote:
> > On Friday, June 24, 2016 04:21:17 PM wes wrote:
> > > > I do not see too many positives for using SMB on linux, without real
> >
> > samba
> >
> > > > user space mount option availabl
If asked to self assess your tcpdump comfort level would you reply with:
* I'm great, what do you need done?
* I'm comfortable, can do capture with filtering
* I'm rusty, but could spin up quick
* Only use it with the man page handy for reference
* tcpwhat?
Back story after a few responses r
s/man page/google results for the specific thing I'm trying to do/ <---
this is me.
-wes
On Mon, Jun 27, 2016 at 10:55 AM, Michael Rasmussen
wrote:
> If asked to self assess your tcpdump comfort level would you reply with:
>
> * I'm great, what do you need done?
> * I'm comfortable, can do ca
Great way of using nmap.
This way you can also see the IPs and machine name together with open ssh
ports:
sudo nmap -p 22 192.168.1.2- | awk '/Nmap scan report for / { hostLine=$0;
hostLinePrinted=0; } /open / && hostLinePrinted==0 { print ""; print
hostLine; print $0; hostLinePrinted=1; next
On Tue, 21 Jun 2016 21:04:39 -0700
John Jason Jordan dijo:
>I need a NAS system which includes a two-bay enclosure capable of
>holding two 6TB drives, and I want to start out with just one 6TB
>drive.
Thanks again to all for the help and suggestions. Just now I placed an
order with Amazon for t
On Mon, 27 Jun 2016, Michael Rasmussen wrote:
If asked to self assess your tcpdump comfort level would you reply with:
* I'm comfortable, can do capture with filtering
* I'm rusty, but could spin up quick
Somewhere between these two, though my filtering chores have tended to
be limited to fi
On Jun 27, 2016 10:56 AM, "Michael Rasmussen" wrote:
>
> If asked to self assess your tcpdump comfort level would you reply with:
>
> * I'm great, what do you need done?
> * I'm comfortable, can do capture with filtering
> * I'm rusty, but could spin up quick
I am right in here. It has been ab
somewhere between 2 and 3, but i would refer to the man page for anything I
hadn't done recently. Much like every other unix utility with more than a
handful of flags (eg ls, tar, bash) - even the ones i use extensively &
daily - I refer to the man page despite familiarity with the tool.
On Mon,
> "chris" == chris (fool) mccraw writes:
chris> somewhere between 2 and 3, but i would refer to the man page for
chris> anything I hadn't done recently. Much like every other unix
chris> utility with more than a handful of flags (eg ls, tar, bash) -
chris> even the ones i use extensively & d
comfortable
-- filtering on host name/IP, protocol (IP, IPv6, TCP, UDP, ARP
...), port, or MAC address
-- more complex filtering (packet inspection) will require
(man+Google)-Fu
On 6/27/2016 10:55 AM, Michael Rasmussen wrote:
> If asked to self assess your tcpdump comfort level would you
On 6/27/2016 10:55 AM, Michael Rasmussen wrote:
>> If asked to self assess your tcpdump comfort level would you reply with:
>>
>>* I'm great, what do you need done?
>>* I'm comfortable, can do capture with filtering
>>* I'm rusty, but could spin up quick
>>* Only use it with the man
Fair to middling, mostly can find what's needed without searching, but
still regularly search for syntax on advanced matching filters
On Mon, Jun 27, 2016, 5:41 PM Dick Steffens wrote:
> On 6/27/2016 10:55 AM, Michael Rasmussen wrote:
> >> If asked to self assess your tcpdump comfort level would
>
> > If asked to self assess your tcpdump comfort level would you reply with:
> >
> > >>* I'm great, what do you need done?
> > >>* I'm comfortable, can do capture with filtering
> > >>* I'm rusty, but could spin up quick
> > >>* Only use it with the man page handy for reference
>
On Saturday, June 25, 2016, Dick Steffens wrote:
> I'm typing this on my laptop.
>
> I've just set up my computer after it was off for a couple of weeks. I'm
> installed at a friend's house, so I don't know much about the local
> network except that it's 192.168.1.xxx being fed by a Netgear WNR10
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