Hello,
On Sat, Aug 12, 2006 at 11:55:14PM -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Since this is meant to provide stats for *BSD, not just FreeBSD, I've
setup bsdstats.org as a more 'neutral' site ...
Maybe you need to move data from bsdstats.hub.org to bsdstats.org?
Because now there is
On Mon, 14 Aug 2006, Igor Robul wrote:
Hello,
On Sat, Aug 12, 2006 at 11:55:14PM -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Since this is meant to provide stats for *BSD, not just FreeBSD, I've
setup bsdstats.org as a more 'neutral' site ...
Maybe you need to move data from bsdstats.hub.org to
On Friday 11 August 2006 22:29, Nikolas Britton wrote:
On 8/11/06, Matthew Seaman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Fri, 11 Aug 2006, Nikolas Britton wrote:
Ok... With my new script it took only 158 minutes to compute ALL
TCP/IP address hashes. I'll repeat that... I
On Sat, 12 Aug 2006, Jonathan Horne wrote:
* Can we trust Marc to delete them?
Won't be anything to delete ... except for any time I need to debug the
server end, the logs will be set to /dev/null ...
* I thought this was going to be an official FreeBSD project hosted on
freebsd.org?
Ok... With my new script it took only 158 minutes to compute ALL
TCP/IP address hashes. I'll repeat that... I have an md5 hash for
every IP address in the world! All I need to do is grep your hash and
it will tell me your IP address. yippee! :-)
Can we please find a new method to track hosts...
Nikolas Britton wrote:
Ok... With my new script it took only 158 minutes to compute ALL
TCP/IP address hashes. I'll repeat that... I have an md5 hash for
every IP address in the world! All I need to do is grep your hash and
it will tell me your IP address. yippee! :-)
Can we please find a
On Fri, 11 Aug 2006, Nikolas Britton wrote:
Ok... With my new script it took only 158 minutes to compute ALL
TCP/IP address hashes. I'll repeat that... I have an md5 hash for
every IP address in the world! All I need to do is grep your hash and
it will tell me your IP address. yippee! :-)
Can
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Fri, 11 Aug 2006, Nikolas Britton wrote:
Ok... With my new script it took only 158 minutes to compute ALL
TCP/IP address hashes. I'll repeat that... I have an md5 hash for
every IP address in the world! All I need to do is grep your hash and
it will tell me your
On Fri, Aug 11, 2006 at 02:38:48PM +0100, Matthew Seaman wrote:
He's trying to prevent any possibility of information disclosure about
his servers. If I wanted to hack into his site, knowing what hosts he
had running (ie. a bunch of live IP numbers) and what OS etc. each used
would mean I'm
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Fri, 11 Aug 2006, Nikolas Britton wrote:
Ok... With my new script it took only 158 minutes to compute ALL
TCP/IP address hashes. I'll repeat that... I have an md5 hash for
every IP address in the world! All I need to do is grep your hash and
it will tell me your IP
Paul Schmehl wrote:
1) encrypt the data being fed to your systems by the script - this
should be relatively easy using keys and would ensure that a man in the
middle attack would fail. You can connect using ssh and a unique key
without having to reveal passwords to anyone.
Uh... HTTPS
Matthew Seaman wrote:
Paul Schmehl wrote:
1) encrypt the data being fed to your systems by the script - this
should be relatively easy using keys and would ensure that a man in the
middle attack would fail. You can connect using ssh and a unique key
without having to reveal passwords to
At 11:49 AM -0500 8/11/06, Paul Schmehl wrote:
I would note that these issues appear to be impacting
the project. As of right now, there are only 1612
systems reporting in, ...
For my part, I've submitted two public hosts. I have
four others I will not submit until I'm certain the
data are
On Fri, 11 Aug 2006, Garance A Drosihn wrote:
At 11:49 AM -0500 8/11/06, Paul Schmehl wrote:
I would note that these issues appear to be impacting
the project. As of right now, there are only 1612
systems reporting in, ...
For my part, I've submitted two public hosts. I have
four others
On 8/11/06, Matthew Seaman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Fri, 11 Aug 2006, Nikolas Britton wrote:
Ok... With my new script it took only 158 minutes to compute ALL
TCP/IP address hashes. I'll repeat that... I have an md5 hash for
every IP address in the world! All I
On 8/9/06, Nikolas Britton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 8/9/06, Marc G. Fournier [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Paul Schmehl wrote:
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Igor Robul wrote:
On Tue, Aug 08, 2006 at 09:30:42PM -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Could
On 8/10/06, Nikolas Britton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 8/9/06, Nikolas Britton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 8/9/06, Marc G. Fournier [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Paul Schmehl wrote:
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Igor Robul wrote:
On Tue, Aug 08,
On Aug 8, 2006, at 5:30 PM, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Antony Mawer wrote:
On 9/08/2006 9:16 AM, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Can you tell me exactly what you do with those two pieces of
data? Is there any way that information would be accessible
from the internet?
Absolutely
On Tue, Aug 08, 2006 at 09:30:42PM -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Could create problems long term .. one thing I will be using the
IPs to do is:
SELECT ip, count(1) FROM systems GROUP BY ip ORDER BY count DESC;
to look for any 'abnormalities' like todays with Armenia ...
hashing it
On 8/9/06, Chris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Nikolas Britton wrote:
On 8/6/06, Marc G. Fournier [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've now committed v2.0 of the 300.statistics periodic script ... this
one
adds the device reporting that we'd talked about previously, and the
summary reports now reflect
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Garrett Cooper wrote:
Also, maybe that person from Armenia installed the script in a
distribution that's included in a virtual image (vmware comes to mind),
and he's loading it on a bunch of different machines behind a (virtual)
NAT or something... just a thought to
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Igor Robul wrote:
On Tue, Aug 08, 2006 at 09:30:42PM -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Could create problems long term .. one thing I will be using the
IPs to do is:
SELECT ip, count(1) FROM systems GROUP BY ip ORDER BY count DESC;
to look for any 'abnormalities' like todays
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, jan gestre wrote:
/usr/local/etc/periodic/monthly/300.statistics
btw is the syntax correct?
monthly_statistics_enable=yes
monthly_statistics_report_devices=yes
or should the yes be YES ?
syntax is correct, and you are now on the countries list :)
thx
Marc G.
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
If that's the case, those numbers should come back again in Sept ...
but, the hostnames for the odd ones were all:
http://www.domain.am;
with the quotes included, which seemed a really odd value for 'hostname'
to have produced :)
Looks like a directadmin host.
On 8/9/06, Igor Robul [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, Aug 08, 2006 at 09:30:42PM -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Could create problems long term .. one thing I will be using the
IPs to do is:
SELECT ip, count(1) FROM systems GROUP BY ip ORDER BY count DESC;
to look for any 'abnormalities'
On Wed, Aug 09, 2006 at 05:54:26AM -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Except that you are disclosing that each and every time you send out an
email, or hit a web site ... :)
Original poster concerned about this because he does not normaly use his
servers for this kind of work, if I had understood
On Wed, Aug 09, 2006 at 05:41:55AM -0500, Nikolas Britton wrote:
# ifconfig | sha256
cbcc2f55a340c248af7e8a10871150d827af11d7051bbc782eefa04b0603248b
# ifconfig | sha1
b607b9d45e6ad40c02ab20800e0d70245ab6db68
# ifconfig | md5
22a2a3eca61166fb113f1a688b3dd842
# ifconfig | cksum
3977021799
On 8/9/06, Nikolas Britton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 8/9/06, Igor Robul [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, Aug 08, 2006 at 09:30:42PM -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Could create problems long term .. one thing I will be using the
IPs to do is:
SELECT ip, count(1) FROM systems GROUP BY
Someone mentioned having output from the script so you would know it was
running. This patch would do that, if you want to add that functionality.
--- 300.statistics.orig Wed Aug 9 09:49:35 2006
+++ 300.statistics Wed Aug 9 09:54:17 2006
@@ -44,6 +44,7 @@
SYS=`/usr/bin/uname -r`
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Igor Robul wrote:
On Tue, Aug 08, 2006 at 09:30:42PM -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Could create problems long term .. one thing I will be using the
IPs to do is:
SELECT ip, count(1) FROM systems GROUP BY ip ORDER BY count DESC;
to look for any
Igor Robul wrote:
The only down side is it still can be faked, just like everything else.
IP from which connection is made cannot be faked, at least I dont know
how to fake it. So there is at least one unfakable part of key. But
there is no real need to keep real IP in database, for privacy
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Paul Schmehl wrote:
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Igor Robul wrote:
On Tue, Aug 08, 2006 at 09:30:42PM -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Could create problems long term .. one thing I will be using the
IPs to do is:
SELECT ip, count(1) FROM systems GROUP BY
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Paul Schmehl wrote:
Igor Robul wrote:
The only down side is it still can be faked, just like everything else.
IP from which connection is made cannot be faked, at least I dont know
how to fake it. So there is at least one unfakable part of key. But
there is no real need
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Vahan Yerkanian wrote:
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
If that's the case, those numbers should come back again in Sept ... but,
the hostnames for the odd ones were all:
http://www.domain.am;
with the quotes included, which seemed a really odd value for 'hostname' to
have
With minor mods, committed ... I moved bsdstats.hub.org to a variable, and
added an 'echo' for when the stats, or a part of them, is disabled, that
way if this ever does get into the base system, ppl reading monthly run
output will know that they exist, and how to turn it on ...
thx ...
On
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
The uniqueness is a combination of IP+hostname ... again, as one pointed
out with PCBSD, this isn't always necessarily the case, but, IMHO, that
is a flaw of PCBSD having all hosts on the same network using the same
hostname ...
That's the nice thing with the
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Howard Jones wrote:
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
The uniqueness is a combination of IP+hostname ... again, as one pointed
out with PCBSD, this isn't always necessarily the case, but, IMHO, that
is a flaw of PCBSD having all hosts on the same network using the same
hostname ...
On Tuesday 08 August 2006 9:17 am, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
But, there is no such ting as an 'index number' ... when everyone reports
in next month, for instance, there is no 'number' that will be re-used
for them that matches something used this month ...
What about:
indexnumber=$(md5 -q
On Tue, 8 Aug 2006, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
--On August 9, 2006 9:32:18 AM +1000 Antony Mawer [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
On 9/08/2006 9:16 AM, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Can you tell me exactly what you do with those two pieces of data? Is
there any way that information would be accessible
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Right, and the bad thing is if yu alias another IP on that device, the
hash totally changes, so we see that one host now as being two different
ones :) That's why we disqualified using ifconfig right at the
beginning ...
But didn't you say that you effectively wipe
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Howard Jones wrote:
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Right, and the bad thing is if yu alias another IP on that device, the
hash totally changes, so we see that one host now as being two different
ones :) That's why we disqualified using ifconfig right at the
beginning ...
But
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Howard Jones wrote:
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Right, and the bad thing is if yu alias another IP on that device, the
hash totally changes, so we see that one host now as being two different
ones :) That's why we disqualified using ifconfig right
Nikolas Britton wrote:
I still like my idea the best for unique keys. It's a better way to
detect hosts behind NATs, here it is again, four versions to pick
from:
# ifconfig | sha256
cbcc2f55a340c248af7e8a10871150d827af11d7051bbc782eefa04b0603248b
# ifconfig | sha1
Svein Halvor Halvorsen wrote:
Why not hash just the hostname? Or MAC-address? Of course these could
Disregard this. I see that the discussion has moved on. I'm with Matthew
Seaman's suggested server generated id-string.
Svein Halvor
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital
In response to Matthew Seaman [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
This problem is intractable: any scheme you can think of to generate a
unique identifying number on a random host out there on the net will either
fail to actually be unique, or suffer from mutating over time as machine
configuration changes.
At 9:32 AM +1000 8/9/06, Antony Mawer wrote:
What if we improved upon this - if instead of storing
the hostname and IP address, we stored a one-way hash
of this information? OpenSSH in recent versions takes
the same approach with its authorized_keys files...
A scattered list of ideas:
It
On Wed, Aug 09, 2006 at 03:16:29PM -0400, Bill Moran wrote:
In response to Matthew Seaman [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
This problem is intractable: any scheme you can think of to generate a
unique identifying number on a random host out there on the net will either
fail to actually be unique, or
On 8/9/06, Marc G. Fournier [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Paul Schmehl wrote:
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Igor Robul wrote:
On Tue, Aug 08, 2006 at 09:30:42PM -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Could create problems long term .. one thing I will be using the
IPs
On 8/08/2006 1:56 PM, David Schulz wrote:
Ok i love the Idea of this, and will have all my machines running that
in no time. Just make the Site look more sleek :)
I will be hopefully the first one representing China on that list as
well (brag :-)
I'm working on it -- unfortunately have been
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Mon, 7 Aug 2006, Matthew Seaman wrote:
I think it would help uptake if when the bsdstats job is first run, it
issues you with a 'registered system number' -- then all of the folks
with low numbered systems get bragging rights...
Actually, there is no registered
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Mon, 7 Aug 2006, Chris wrote:
Just my .02 worth - that Sparc64 listing Is mine Wheee!
There are two Sparc64 listings ... both yours?
The 8 in Panama are all mine :)
Where's Chile? I just added 4 boxes and they're not listed.
Excellent job Marc!
Hello,
i have started to run this script , but for some reason i dont show
up in the list. or maybe i do, but at least not the country from
which i am submitting, china, has still zero entries. how can this
be? my ip does resolve to a host in china when using some geoip
lookup service...
On Tue, 8 Aug 2006, Mikhail Goriachev wrote:
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Mon, 7 Aug 2006, Chris wrote:
Just my .02 worth - that Sparc64 listing Is mine Wheee!
There are two Sparc64 listings ... both yours?
The 8 in Panama are all mine :)
Where's Chile? I just added 4 boxes and
On Tue, 8 Aug 2006, David Schulz wrote:
Hello,
i have started to run this script , but for some reason i dont show up in the
list. or maybe i do, but at least not the country from which i am submitting,
china, has still zero entries. how can this be? my ip does resolve to a host
in china
cool yes, now i see it also, but it wasn't there before right after i
executed my script. is there maybe some sort of delay before the data
appears?
On Aug 8, 2006, at 4:01 PM, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Tue, 8 Aug 2006, David Schulz wrote:
Hello,
i have started to run this script , but
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Tue, 8 Aug 2006, Mikhail Goriachev wrote:
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Mon, 7 Aug 2006, Chris wrote:
Just my .02 worth - that Sparc64 listing Is mine Wheee!
There are two Sparc64 listings ... both yours?
The 8 in Panama are all mine :)
Where's Chile? I
Hello,
I think there is at least one error in country naming:
should be Kazakhstan instead of Kazakstan. Our friends from Kazakhstan
of course can correct me.
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
On Mon, Aug 07, 2006 at 12:42:27AM -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
I've now committed v2.0 of the 300.statistics periodic script ... this one
adds the device reporting that we'd talked about previously, and the
summary reports now reflect the driver(s) in use for those deciding to
report
On Tuesday 08 August 2006 04:22, David Schulz wrote:
cool yes, now i see it also, but it wasn't there before right after i
executed my script. is there maybe some sort of delay before the data
appears?
On Aug 8, 2006, at 4:01 PM, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Tue, 8 Aug 2006, David Schulz
On Tue, 8 Aug 2006, Matthew Seaman wrote:
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Mon, 7 Aug 2006, Matthew Seaman wrote:
I think it would help uptake if when the bsdstats job is first run, it
issues you with a 'registered system number' -- then all of the folks
with low numbered systems get bragging
On Tue, 8 Aug 2006, David Schulz wrote:
cool yes, now i see it also, but it wasn't there before right after i
executed my script. is there maybe some sort of delay before the data
appears?
Yup, but only as the database grows ... I'm using the pear GeoIP module to
determine country, of
On 07/08/2006 05:42, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
I've now committed v2.0 of the 300.statistics periodic script ... this
one adds the device reporting that we'd talked about previously, and the
summary reports now reflect the driver(s) in use for those deciding to
report ...
This Phase of the
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Tue, 8 Aug 2006, Matthew Seaman wrote:
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Mon, 7 Aug 2006, Matthew Seaman wrote:
I think it would help uptake if when the bsdstats job is first run, it
issues you with a 'registered system number' -- then all of the folks
with low
On Tue, 8 Aug 2006, Karol Kwiatkowski wrote:
On 07/08/2006 05:42, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
I've now committed v2.0 of the 300.statistics periodic script ... this
one adds the device reporting that we'd talked about previously, and the
summary reports now reflect the driver(s) in use for those
On Tue, 8 Aug 2006, Gerhard Schmidt wrote:
On Mon, Aug 07, 2006 at 12:42:27AM -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
I've now committed v2.0 of the 300.statistics periodic script ... this one
adds the device reporting that we'd talked about previously, and the
summary reports now reflect the
Marc, I have a couple of questions.
You use hostname and IP as a unique identifier for each host. For that
reason, I have not submitted any of our systems. We use FreeBSD for
sensitive security-related tasks, and we're loath to reveal that
information. (When I submit or update ports, I
Paul Schmehl wrote:
Finally, it looks like your number one problem is going to be
maintainence. Right now you're showing a .x and a F.x release. Not
sure if that's tampering or what, but it's obviously not legit. You
also have a sudden influx of hosts from Armenia. Again, don't know if
Paul Schmehl wrote:
Finally, it looks like your number one problem is going to be
maintainence. Right now you're showing a .x and a F.x release. Not
sure if that's tampering or what, but it's obviously not legit. You
also have a sudden influx of hosts from Armenia. Again, don't know if
Vahan Yerkanian wrote:
Paul Schmehl wrote:
Finally, it looks like your number one problem is going to be
maintainence. Right now you're showing a .x and a F.x release.
Not sure if that's tampering or what, but it's obviously not legit.
You also have a sudden influx of hosts from Armenia.
Vahan Yerkanian wrote:
Paul Schmehl wrote:
Finally, it looks like your number one problem is going to be
maintainence. Right now you're showing a .x and a F.x release.
Not sure if that's tampering or what, but it's obviously not legit.
You also have a sudden influx of hosts from Armenia.
On 8/6/06, Marc G. Fournier [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've now committed v2.0 of the 300.statistics periodic script ... this one
adds the device reporting that we'd talked about previously, and the
summary reports now reflect the driver(s) in use for those deciding to
report ...
This Phase of
Nikolas Britton wrote:
On 8/6/06, Marc G. Fournier [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've now committed v2.0 of the 300.statistics periodic script ... this
one
adds the device reporting that we'd talked about previously, and the
summary reports now reflect the driver(s) in use for those deciding to
On 8/8/06, Chris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Nikolas Britton wrote:
On 8/6/06, Marc G. Fournier [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've now committed v2.0 of the 300.statistics periodic script ... this
one
adds the device reporting that we'd talked about previously, and the
summary reports now reflect
On Tue, 8 Aug 2006, Paul Schmehl wrote:
Marc, I have a couple of questions.
You use hostname and IP as a unique identifier for each host. For that
reason, I have not submitted any of our systems. We use FreeBSD for
sensitive security-related tasks, and we're loath to reveal that
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Vahan Yerkanian wrote:
Paul Schmehl wrote:
Finally, it looks like your number one problem is going to be maintainence.
Right now you're showing a .x and a F.x release. Not sure if that's
tampering or what, but it's obviously not legit. You also have a sudden
influx of
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Vahan Yerkanian wrote:
Paul Schmehl wrote:
Finally, it looks like your number one problem is going to be maintainence.
Right now you're showing a .x and a F.x release. Not sure if that's
tampering or what, but it's obviously not legit. You also have a sudden
influx of
On Tue, 8 Aug 2006, Nikolas Britton wrote:
How about some uptime stats as well?
No. We agreed we would not track people.
Again, if we add uptime states, it would be a *seperate* opt-in option ...
the only quasi-not-opt-in (you still have to tell it to run the script) is
the uname
On Tue, 8 Aug 2006, Nikolas Britton wrote:
Also why not track the ones with no driver attached... you should still
be able to tell what the device is.
I was looking at it from a 'what drivers / hardware is in use' not 'what
hardware is available' ...
Marc G. Fournier Hub.Org
On 9/08/2006 9:16 AM, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Can you tell me exactly what you do with those two pieces of data? Is
there any way that information would be accessible from the internet?
Absolutely nothing else we do with it ... it just gives us a unique key
to work with ... in fact, assuming
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Antony Mawer wrote:
On 9/08/2006 9:16 AM, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Can you tell me exactly what you do with those two pieces of data? Is
there any way that information would be accessible from the internet?
Absolutely nothing else we do with it ... it just gives us a
On Tue, 8 Aug 2006, Matthew Seaman wrote:
Anyhow, how about the following little enhancement. This lists the CPUs
on the system pretending they are CPU0, CPU1, ... devices. The URI
escape stuff should be automatically decoded by PHP without any extra
coding required.
Perfect, added to
On 8/8/06, Marc G. Fournier [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 8 Aug 2006, Matthew Seaman wrote:
Anyhow, how about the following little enhancement. This lists the CPUs
on the system pretending they are CPU0, CPU1, ... devices. The URI
escape stuff should be automatically decoded by PHP
--On August 9, 2006 9:32:18 AM +1000 Antony Mawer
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 9/08/2006 9:16 AM, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Can you tell me exactly what you do with those two pieces of data? Is
there any way that information would be accessible from the internet?
Absolutely nothing else we do
On Tue, 8 Aug 2006, Nikolas Britton wrote:
On 8/8/06, Marc G. Fournier [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 8 Aug 2006, Matthew Seaman wrote:
Anyhow, how about the following little enhancement. This lists the CPUs
on the system pretending they are CPU0, CPU1, ... devices. The URI
escape
On 9/08/2006 1:49 PM, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Tue, 8 Aug 2006, Nikolas Britton wrote:
PCBSD# uname -a
FreeBSD PCBSD.localhost 6.1-RELEASE-p2 FreeBSD 6.1-RELEASE-p2 #0: Fri
Jun 16 09:21:34 PDT 2006
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/PCBSDv1.11 i386
Unfortunately, if they are *all* the
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006, Antony Mawer wrote:
On 9/08/2006 1:49 PM, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
On Tue, 8 Aug 2006, Nikolas Britton wrote:
PCBSD# uname -a
FreeBSD PCBSD.localhost 6.1-RELEASE-p2 FreeBSD 6.1-RELEASE-p2 #0: Fri
Jun 16 09:21:34 PDT 2006
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/PCBSDv1.11
While I'm definately interested in the statistical reporting, I do have
one suggestion:
Add a random sleep time to the update.
Otherwise, the reporting server is gonna get HAMMERED once a month,
assuming this project gains any kind of momentum.
A random sleep timer at the beginning of the
Hello Marc,
Monday, August 7, 2006, 5:42:27 AM, you wrote:
I've now committed v2.0 of the 300.statistics periodic script ... this one
adds the device reporting that we'd talked about previously, and the
summary reports now reflect the driver(s) in use for those deciding to
report ...
I've
On Mon, 7 Aug 2006, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
While I'm definately interested in the statistical reporting, I do have
one suggestion:
Add a random sleep time to the update.
Otherwise, the reporting server is gonna get HAMMERED once a month,
assuming this project gains any kind of momentum.
On Mon, Aug 07, 2006, at 00:42:27 -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
I've now committed v2.0 of the 300.statistics periodic script ...
this one adds the device reporting that we'd talked about previously,
and the summary reports now reflect the driver(s) in use for those
deciding to report ...
Mark Kane wrote:
On Mon, Aug 07, 2006, at 00:42:27 -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
I've now committed v2.0 of the 300.statistics periodic script ...
this one adds the device reporting that we'd talked about previously,
and the summary reports now reflect the driver(s) in use for those
deciding
Chris wrote:
Mark Kane wrote:
On Mon, Aug 07, 2006, at 00:42:27 -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
I've now committed v2.0 of the 300.statistics periodic script ...
this one adds the device reporting that we'd talked about previously,
and the summary reports now reflect the driver(s) in use for
On Mon, 7 Aug 2006, Mark Kane wrote:
On Mon, Aug 07, 2006, at 00:42:27 -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
I've now committed v2.0 of the 300.statistics periodic script ...
this one adds the device reporting that we'd talked about previously,
and the summary reports now reflect the driver(s) in
On Mon, 7 Aug 2006, Chris wrote:
Just my .02 worth - that Sparc64 listing Is mine Wheee!
There are two Sparc64 listings ... both yours?
The 8 in Panama are all mine :)
Marc G. Fournier Hub.Org Networking Services (http://www.hub.org)
Email . [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Mon, Aug 07, 2006, at 17:18:04 -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Refresh the page, I've add a new table since, which I believe is what
you are asking for :)
Exactly. Just a couple minutes after I hit send, I saw that there and
thought wow, that was fast! Then again I didn't see my post on the
On Mon, 7 Aug 2006, Mark Kane wrote:
On Mon, Aug 07, 2006, at 17:18:04 -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
Refresh the page, I've add a new table since, which I believe is what
you are asking for :)
Exactly. Just a couple minutes after I hit send, I saw that there and
thought wow, that was fast!
On 8/6/06, Marc G. Fournier [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've now committed v2.0 of the 300.statistics periodic script ... this one
adds the device reporting that we'd talked about previously, and the
summary reports now reflect the driver(s) in use for those deciding to
report ...
This Phase of
For those of us who can't read minds, what's the port to
install, and the website where we can view the stats? :)
___
It is http://bsdstats.hub.org
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
In response to Pat Maddox [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
For those of us who can't read minds, what's the port to install, and
the website where we can view the stats? :)
As a side track on this, it'd be nice if the port installation message
said something like got to http://bsdstats.hub.org to see
Bill Moran wrote:
In response to Pat Maddox [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
For those of us who can't read minds, what's the port to install, and
the website where we can view the stats? :)
As a side track on this, it'd be nice if the port installation message
said something like got to
1 - 100 of 120 matches
Mail list logo