Re: Tools to measure TCP connection speed

2008-03-13 Thread Wil Schultz
wrote: Hi Wil, could you give me a pointer how ttcp could be used router to router? cheers, Gabor Wil Schultz wrote: A couple of tools I use from time to time are iperf and ttcp. I'll run iperf on some host and either run ttcp to it from a router or iperf to another host. You can also run

Tools to measure TCP connection speed

2008-03-10 Thread Joe Shen
hi, is there any tool could measue e2e TCP connection speed? e.g. we want to measue the delay between the TCP SYN and receiving SYN ACK packet. Joe __ Search, browse and book your hotels and flights through

RE: Tools to measure TCP connection speed

2008-03-10 Thread Darden, Patrick S.
Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Joe Shen Sent: Monday, March 10, 2008 5:00 AM To: NANGO Subject: Tools to measure TCP connection speed hi, is there any tool could measue e2e TCP connection speed? e.g. we want to measue the delay between the TCP SYN

Re: Tools to measure TCP connection speed

2008-03-10 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2008-03-10, Joe Shen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: is there any tool could measue e2e TCP connection speed? hping (or tcpdump while you make a connection by any method).

RE: Tools to measure TCP connection speed

2008-03-10 Thread Ray Burkholder
On 2008-03-10, Joe Shen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: is there any tool could measue e2e TCP connection speed? WireShark, which also has a basic analysis package built-in for error and connection setup statistics. -- Scanned for viruses and dangerous content at http://www.oneunified.net

RE: Tools to measure TCP connection speed

2008-03-10 Thread Michienne Dixon
We use LAN Traffic v2 to test speeds on our network. http://www.omnicor.com/netest.htm - Michienne Dixon Network Administrator liNKCity 312 Armour Rd North Kansas City, MO 64116 www.linkcity.org (816) 412-7990 From: Joe Shen Sent: Mon 3/10/2008 4:00 AM To: NANGO Subject: Tools to measure TCP

Re: Tools to measure TCP connection speed

2008-03-10 Thread Christopher Morrow
On Mon, Mar 10, 2008 at 4:00 AM, Joe Shen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: hi, is there any tool could measue e2e TCP connection speed? e.g. we want to measue the delay between the TCP SYN and receiving SYN ACK packet. So, all you want to know is basic RTT? Do you want to know about the

RE: Tools to measure TCP connection speed

2008-03-10 Thread Joe Shen
. Is there tools like smokeping to monitoring e2e TCP connecting speed? Joe --- Darden, Patrick S. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Best way to do it is right after the SYN just count one one thousand, two one thousand until you get the ACK. This works best for RFC 1149 traffic, but is applicable

RE: Tools to measure TCP connection speed

2008-03-10 Thread Jamie Bowden
transferring whatever file(s) you feed it. -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Joe Shen Sent: Monday, March 10, 2008 11:51 AM To: NANGO Subject: RE: Tools to measure TCP connection speed we do not just want to analyze e2e performance, but to monitor

Re: Tools to measure TCP connection speed

2008-03-10 Thread Wil Schultz
A couple of tools I use from time to time are iperf and ttcp. I'll run iperf on some host and either run ttcp to it from a router or iperf to another host. You can also run ttcp router to router. -wil On Mar 10, 2008, at 8:51 AM, Joe Shen wrote: we do not just want to analyze e2e

F/OSS SNMP tools (was Re: Cacti 0.8.6j Released)

2007-05-08 Thread Kevin Blackham
You only need to worry about vendor MIBs if you're trying to query/monitor something vendor-specific. Standard stuff like ifInOctets and ifDescr are included in everything. I like to either read through MIBs by hand, or load em in a MIB browser (like mbrowse or use vendor C's snmp explorer

IP Address allocation/asigment tools

2006-07-07 Thread Ramarajan, Arvind, ALABS
Hi, Would like to know about any off the shelf or freeware software application/tools out there to manage IP address (allocate/assign both for IPv4 and IPv6) in a SP network environment. Pros and Cons are welcome. Thanx

Re: 2006.06.05 NANOG-NOTES BGP tools BOF notes

2006-06-10 Thread Christopher L. Morrow
On Wed, 7 Jun 2006, Bruno Quoitin wrote: Matthew Petach wrote: Q: Randy Bush. Common problem we all face. I'm at 42 peering points; my neighbors are X. I have route views dumps, I have my BGP dumps. I have my netflow data. Want a whatifatron that shows what happens to my traffic

Re: 2006.06.05 NANOG-NOTES BGP tools BOF notes

2006-06-07 Thread Bruno Quoitin
Matthew Petach wrote: Q: Randy Bush. Common problem we all face. I'm at 42 peering points; my neighbors are X. I have route views dumps, I have my BGP dumps. I have my netflow data. Want a whatifatron that shows what happens to my traffic if depeer someone, or add someone, or peer with

2006.06.05 NANOG-NOTES BGP tools BOF notes

2006-06-06 Thread Matthew Petach
(ok, last set of notes for tonight, and then it's off to bed for 90 minutes of sleep before heading back to the convention center. ^_^; --MNP) 2006.06.05 Welcome to the 4th BGP Tools BOF! [slides are at http://www.nanog.org/mtg-0606/pdf/lixia-zhang.pdf Nick Feamster GeorgeTech Dan Massey

Tools for LARTing large nets of compromised boxen?

2006-04-20 Thread Michael Loftis
One of our customers is (has been) under concerted attempt at a DDoS attack against their web server off and on for a while. I've lists of IPs, lots of them, many hundreds. I'd like to know if anyone has a tool that will take and match these lists of IPs into abuse contacts and fire off a

Re: Tools for LARTing large nets of compromised boxen?

2006-04-20 Thread Michael Loftis
--On April 20, 2006 12:51:35 AM -0600 Michael Loftis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Any help? TIA! And before you go off on me YES these are the RESPONSIBLE boxen. There might be a CnC behind the drones but I'd have no way of obtaining that without cooperation. The actual attack is an old

Re: Tools for LARTing large nets of compromised boxen?

2006-04-20 Thread Jon Lewis
On Thu, 20 Apr 2006, Michael Loftis wrote: One of our customers is (has been) under concerted attempt at a DDoS attack against their web server off and on for a while. I've lists of IPs, lots of them, many hundreds. I'd like to know if anyone has a tool that will take and match these

Re: Tools for LARTing large nets of compromised boxen? (on/off list summary)

2006-04-20 Thread Michael Loftis
I received quite a few good responses, I've ended up using incident.pl and wormeter.pl from the list below (found at the same place). Thanks again everyone. IASON was pointed out but seems incomplete http://iason.site.voila.fr/ and http://sourceforge.net/projects/iason/ Another member

Re: Backbone Monitoring Tools

2006-03-29 Thread Alexei Roudnev
I use snmpstatd - snmpstat.sf.net . - Original Message - From: Ray Burkholder [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: 'Ashe Canvar' [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, March 28, 2006 4:47 PM Subject: RE: Backbone Monitoring Tools A few more comments. I found a link to snmp

Re: Backbone Monitoring Tools

2006-03-29 Thread Jim Trocki
On Wed, 29 Mar 2006, Alexei Roudnev wrote: I use snmpstatd - snmpstat.sf.net . Oooh, looks nice! From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ashe Canvar 2. actively detect routing changes / failover to redundant paths using traceroutes i.e. alert if

Re: Backbone Monitoring Tools

2006-03-29 Thread M. David Leonard
D'oh!! At first I thought he was asking for backHOE monitoring tools. Around here we simply bury a short length of fiber and wait a few minutes until the backhoes sniff it out and start digging sorta like the way they use pigs to search for truffles

Re: Backbone Monitoring Tools

2006-03-29 Thread Alexei Roudnev
system (just set of aliases + archive for alerts, warnings and so on), osiris (control server's changes), and few other tools (you can see short description on the snmpstat page). It is not (yes; I have it in TODO but did not had demand so it was not completed) packed as 'rpm' or well auto-configured

Re: Backbone Monitoring Tools

2006-03-29 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Tue, 28 Mar 2006 16:07:27 PST, Ashe Canvar said: 2. actively detect routing changes / failover to redundant paths using traceroutes i.e. alert if SFO-CHG-NYC changes to SFO-LXE-HOU-NYC ( link state protocols suck as far as testing backup paths go) Two words: Asymmetric

Re: Backbone Monitoring Tools

2006-03-29 Thread Bill Nash
Wouldn't you be better served just walking the netToMedia tables for your devices? Parsing configs sucks. Even caching the contents of a simple snmpwalk would save you some pain. Shovel 'em into a db and call it a day. - billn On Wed, 29 Mar 2006, Ashe Canvar wrote: Well, True. But the

Backbone Monitoring Tools

2006-03-28 Thread Ashe Canvar
Hi All, I want a simple backbone monitor for my 5 datacenters. My backbone consists of redundant IPSEC/GRE tunnnels. At the very least I want to ping, traceroute and transfer a small file every few minutes over all IPSEC links. I am sure there are products that do this already, but I am having

Re: Backbone Monitoring Tools

2006-03-28 Thread Jon Lyons
mrtg..Ashe Canvar [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi All,I want a simple backbone monitor for my 5 datacenters. My "backbone"consists of redundant IPSEC/GRE tunnnels.At the very least I want to ping, traceroute and transfer a small fileevery few minutes over all IPSEC links. I am sure there are

Re: Backbone Monitoring Tools

2006-03-28 Thread Kevin
end up writing some custom code, but you could do worse than to build on top of one of the open-source monitoring tools. For example, I use a highly customized version of AutoStatus for up/down alerting, primarily because I like how it handles dependencies. Kevin

Re: Backbone Monitoring Tools

2006-03-28 Thread Bill Nash
If you can't say something useful.. Assuming you're looking for basic latency and availability monitoring, with alerts: http://www.smokeping.org - billn On Tue, 28 Mar 2006, Jon Lyons wrote: mrtg.. Ashe Canvar [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi All, I want a simple backbone monitor for my 5

Re: Backbone Monitoring Tools

2006-03-28 Thread Bill Thompson
On Tue, 28 Mar 2006 15:13:23 -0800 Ashe Canvar [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi All, I want a simple backbone monitor for my 5 datacenters. My backbone consists of redundant IPSEC/GRE tunnnels. At the very least I want to ping, traceroute and transfer a small file every few minutes over

Re: Backbone Monitoring Tools

2006-03-28 Thread Josh Cheney
I have had a decent amount of success with Nagios. It is not trivial to setup, but once it is up and running, it has always handled our dependencies and such very well. Additionally, because it calls external programs to do the checks, it is pretty simple to write a script that measures whatever

Re: Backbone Monitoring Tools

2006-03-28 Thread Ashe Canvar
Thanks for the quick responses. Perhaps I should have been more explicit. I already use remstats (http://remstats.sourceforge.net/release/index.html) for interface b/w monitoring. I have worked with nagios and openview int he past. I have an ospf based network. The specific monitoring problem I

Re: Backbone Monitoring Tools

2006-03-28 Thread Bill Thompson
On Tue, 28 Mar 2006 16:07:27 -0800 Ashe Canvar [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Thanks for the quick responses. Perhaps I should have been more explicit. I already use remstats (http://remstats.sourceforge.net/release/index.html) for interface b/w monitoring. I have worked with nagios and

RE: Backbone Monitoring Tools

2006-03-28 Thread Ray Burkholder
1. Cricket with Acktomic tools to monitor Cisco SLA/SAA/RTR values 2. ospf snmp traps to snmptrapd? I think somewhere in the archives someone did some perl scripting to watch ospf stuff. OSPF has some mibs that can be used for data gathering. Ed Ravin had an add-on for http://linux.kernel.org

Re: Backbone Monitoring Tools

2006-03-28 Thread Martin Hannigan
At 06:23 PM 3/28/2006, Jon Lyons wrote: mrtg.. MRTG is not a monitoring system. It's a data collection system. Toby should have never put in the alarm configuration. But he did. Anyhow. There's some tools listed in the NANOG faq, but two very easy ones come to mind. 1. NAGIOS 2. NOCOL (I

RE: Backbone Monitoring Tools

2006-03-28 Thread Ray Burkholder
to generate your grid for 1) and 3). -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ashe Canvar Sent: Tuesday, March 28, 2006 20:07 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Backbone Monitoring Tools Thanks for the quick responses. Perhaps I should have been more

Re: Backbone Monitoring Tools

2006-03-28 Thread Jon Lyons
Do you need generate alerts? Orprovide trending informationto measure performance?I said mrtg or rrd because you can create graphs based on the ping repsonse time packet loss between the datacenters, you could also create a graph showing how long it takes to transfere a file to remote site.

Re: Network graphics tools

2006-03-22 Thread Owen DeLong
are your preferred tools for network drawings, both for internal and external use? I'd hate to be driven to Windows only because I need Visio. -- If this message was not signed with gpg key 0FE2AA3D, it's probably a forgery. pgpgYmbMdNBcw.pgp Description: PGP signature

Re: Network graphics tools

2006-03-22 Thread Mark Smith
; I much prefer things like rectangles saying 7507 STL-1 or M160 NYC-3. Assuming you use *NIX platforms (including BSD under Mac OS X), what are your preferred tools for network drawings, both for internal and external use? I'd hate to be driven to Windows only because I need Visio. I've

Re: Network graphics tools

2006-03-22 Thread Michael . Dillon
If you're doing diagrams for internal use and know the chances of them being used with external parties is slim-to-none, go ahead, play with toys like dia. Rather strong opinion... PDFs are almost 100% acceptable, with a few losers left who won't install a reader. Hey, wait a minute! DIA

Re: Network graphics tools

2006-03-22 Thread Steven M. Bellovin
On Wed, 22 Mar 2006 19:07:59 +1030, Mark Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I haven't tried it, however there is a probability that Firefox 1.5 can view the .SVGs Inkscape produces natively. In general, I don't know; however, the copy on my laptop (Firefox 1.5.0.1 on NetBSD-current) can display

Re: Network graphics tools

2006-03-22 Thread Roger Marquis
John Kinsella wrote: Not sure how preferring things like rectangles stops you from using Visio, but *shrug* Probably has more to do with the other features of Visio. Hidden metadata, slow VBS, fragile registry dependencies, ... all of which engineers tend to discover before an important

Network graphics tools

2006-03-21 Thread Howard C. Berkowitz
platforms (including BSD under Mac OS X), what are your preferred tools for network drawings, both for internal and external use? I'd hate to be driven to Windows only because I need Visio.

Re: Network graphics tools

2006-03-21 Thread Randy Bush
xfig emacs artist-mode randy

Re: Network graphics tools

2006-03-21 Thread Roland Dobbins
rectangles saying 7507 STL-1 or M160 NYC-3. Assuming you use *NIX platforms (including BSD under Mac OS X), what are your preferred tools for network drawings, both for internal and external use? I'd hate to be driven to Windows only because I need Visio. I use OmniGraffle Pro for OS/X: http

Re: Network graphics tools

2006-03-21 Thread Wil Schultz
rectangles saying 7507 STL-1 or M160 NYC-3. Assuming you use *NIX platforms (including BSD under Mac OS X), what are your preferred tools for network drawings, both for internal and external use? I'd hate to be driven to Windows only because I need Visio.

Re: Network graphics tools

2006-03-21 Thread Steven M. Bellovin
On Tue, 21 Mar 2006 16:20:19 -1000, Randy Bush [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: xfig And something I learned only recently -- xfig comes with a large library of clip art. Here are the categories on my system: $ ls /usr/pkg/lib/X11/xfig/Libraries/ Arrows Electronic Labels

Re: Network graphics tools

2006-03-21 Thread Bill Woodcock
rectangles saying 7507 STL-1 or M160 NYC-3. Assuming you use *NIX platforms (including BSD under Mac OS X), what are your preferred tools for network drawings, both for internal and external use? I'd hate to be driven to Windows only because I need Visio. Omnigraffle! http

Re: Network graphics tools

2006-03-21 Thread Jon Lewis
On Tue, 21 Mar 2006, Howard C. Berkowitz wrote: Much of the enterprise market seems wedded to Visio as their network graphics tool, which locks them into Windows. Personally, I hate both little pictures of equipment and Cisco hockey-puck icons; I much prefer things like rectangles saying

Re: Network graphics tools

2006-03-21 Thread John Kinsella
like rectangles saying 7507 STL-1 or M160 NYC-3. Not sure how preferring things like rectangles stops you from using Visio, but *shrug* Assuming you use *NIX platforms (including BSD under Mac OS X), what are your preferred tools for network drawings, both for internal and external use? I'd

Re: Network graphics tools

2006-03-21 Thread Andrew Burnette
-3. Assuming you use *NIX platforms (including BSD under Mac OS X), what are your preferred tools for network drawings, both for internal and external use? I'd hate to be driven to Windows only because I need Visio. http://www.nethack.net/software/netmapr/ is an alternative as well. I

Re: Network graphics tools

2006-03-21 Thread Bill Woodcock
On Tue, 21 Mar 2006, John Kinsella wrote: If you're doing diagrams for internal use and know the chances of them being used with external parties is slim-to-none, go ahead, play with toys like dia. Omnigraffle looks hopeful, but haven't personally used. Omnigraffle can

Re: Network graphics tools

2006-03-21 Thread Mark Rogaski
An entity claiming to be John Kinsella ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: : : Not trying to start a Visio religious war, just saying there's a reason : enterprises use it. : And it's not just that they think that having thousands of open stencil windows is impressive when you open a single diagram?

Re: Network graphics tools

2006-03-21 Thread Gary E. Miller
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Yo Howard! On Tue, Mar 21, 2006 at 09:17:44PM -0500, Howard C. Berkowitz wrote: Much of the enterprise market seems wedded to Visio as their network graphics tool, which locks them into Windows. Personally, I hate both little pictures of

Re: Network graphics tools

2006-03-21 Thread Mark Foster
On Tue, 21 Mar 2006, Mark Rogaski wrote: An entity claiming to be John Kinsella ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: : : Not trying to start a Visio religious war, just saying there's a reason : enterprises use it. : And it's not just that they think that having thousands of open stencil windows is

Re: Network graphics tools

2006-03-21 Thread neal rauhauser
of equipment and Cisco hockey-puck icons; I much prefer things like rectangles saying 7507 STL-1 or M160 NYC-3. Assuming you use *NIX platforms (including BSD under Mac OS X), what are your preferred tools for network drawings, both for internal and external use? I'd hate to be driven

NANOG36-NOTES 2006.02.14 talk 1 IRR power tools

2006-02-14 Thread Matthew Petach
Apologies in advance, notes from this morning will be a bit more scattered, as I was working on an issue in parallel to taking notes. Matt 2006.02.14 talk 1 IRR Power Tools 12:10 to 12:25, extra talk added, not on printed agenda. Thanks to those who submitted lightning talks. PC committee

NANOG36-NOTES 2006.02.14 talk 2 Netflow Visualization Tools

2006-02-14 Thread Matthew Petach
2006.02.14 talk 2 Netflow tools Bill Yurcik byurcik at ncsa.uiuc.edu NVisionIP and VisFlowConnect-IP probably a dozen tools out there, this is just two of them. Concenses is there's something to this. They're an edge network, comes into ISP domain, their tools are used by entities with many

Re: NANOG36-NOTES 2006.02.14 talk 2 Netflow Visualization Tools

2006-02-14 Thread Vicky Røde
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 thanks for taking notes. comments in-line: Matthew Petach wrote: 2006.02.14 talk 2 Netflow tools Bill Yurcik byurcik at ncsa.uiuc.edu NVisionIP and VisFlowConnect-IP probably a dozen tools out there, this is just two of them. Concenses

NANOG36-NOTES 2006.02.14 Tools BOF Notes

2006-02-14 Thread Matthew Petach
Last notes of the day... Matt 2006.02.14 Tools BOF Todd Underwood, panel moderator A number of interesting tools presented earlier today; all of them are good and interesting and solve a particular set of problems. None are in widespread use. There's a lot of possible reasons; do they solve

Re: NANOG36-NOTES 2006.02.14 talk 2 Netflow Visualization Tools

2006-02-14 Thread Roland Dobbins
MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 thanks for taking notes. comments in-line: Matthew Petach wrote: 2006.02.14 talk 2 Netflow tools Bill Yurcik byurcik at ncsa.uiuc.edu NVisionIP and VisFlowConnect-IP probably a dozen tools out there, this is just two of them. Concenses is there's something to this. They're

Re: NetFlow tools?

2006-02-06 Thread Wil Schultz
Thanks for all of the responses! So the goal is to be able to monitor flows real time as well as historically, set up triggers when specific criteria is met, and nice graphs are always a definate plus. Site consists of 4 6509's with a 95th percentile of about 120MBits, along with about 30

NetFlow tools?

2006-02-05 Thread Wil Schultz
I'm planning to set up NetFlow in my environment within the next few weeks, so far two suites that look promising to me are flow-tools and SiLK. Anyone have any input on which would be better to use (or maybe some other product)? -Wil

Re: NetFlow tools?

2006-02-05 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Sun, 05 Feb 2006 19:59:06 PST, Wil Schultz said: I'm planning to set up NetFlow in my environment within the next few weeks, so far two suites that look promising to me are flow-tools and SiLK. Anyone have any input on which would be better to use (or maybe some other product

Re: NetFlow tools?

2006-02-05 Thread Rob Thomas
Hi, Wil. ] I'm planning to set up NetFlow in my environment within the next few ] weeks... I much prefer nfsen/nfdump. This suite maintains data over the long term, has both a command line and a graphical interface, and is easy to configure and maintain. The developer is also very open to

Re: Tools classifying network traffic to applications

2005-09-23 Thread ravi pina
not sure if this meets your requirements, but if you want an appliance there are: http://www.visualnetworks.com/ http://www.networkinstruments.com/ -r -- +++ATH 7MN; {{{

Re: Tools classifying network traffic to applications

2005-09-23 Thread Petri Helenius
Joe Shen wrote: It seems to focus on P2P application. Is there tool to support applications as more as possible( include p2p, voip, web, ftp, network game, etc. ) The emphasis on p2p is mainly due to the usual questions focusing on them. Obviously the more traditional protocols like

Tools classifying network traffic to applications

2005-09-22 Thread Joe Shen
Hi, As I know there is tools designed to analyze VoIP traffic, but for viewpoint of traffic management this is not enough. Is there tool which could classify network traffic to its applications? e.g. the tools catch network traffic and recognize its application type automatically. If 80% of (80

Re: Tools classifying network traffic to applications

2005-09-22 Thread Erik Haagsman
Google for FlowScan and CUFlow On Thu, 2005-09-22 at 18:11 +0800, Joe Shen wrote: Hi, As I know there is tools designed to analyze VoIP traffic, but for viewpoint of traffic management this is not enough. Is there tool which could classify network traffic to its applications? e.g

Re: Tools classifying network traffic to applications

2005-09-22 Thread Christopher L. Morrow
for that... these, it would seem to me, would all require in-line traffic capture or mirrored port (mirrored traffic, not necessarily an ethernet port mirror) to be effective. On Thu, 2005-09-22 at 18:11 +0800, Joe Shen wrote: Hi, As I know there is tools designed to analyze VoIP traffic

Re: Tools classifying network traffic to applications

2005-09-22 Thread Darren Bounds
Sure, Check out Intrusense nSight: http://www.intrusense.com/products Darren On 9/22/05, Joe Shen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi, As I know there is tools designed to analyze VoIP traffic, but for viewpoint of traffic management this is not enough. Is there tool which could classify

Re: Tools classifying network traffic to applications

2005-09-22 Thread Petri Helenius
Christopher L. Morrow wrote: which can't really tell bittorrent (or ssh or aim or...) over tcp/80 from http over tcp/80... I think Joe's looking for something that knows what protocols look like below the port number and can spit out numbers for that... these, it would seem to me, would all

Re: Tools classifying network traffic to applications

2005-09-22 Thread Christopher L. Morrow
On Thu, 22 Sep 2005, Petri Helenius wrote: Christopher L. Morrow wrote: which can't really tell bittorrent (or ssh or aim or...) over tcp/80 from http over tcp/80... I think Joe's looking for something that knows what protocols look like below the port number and can spit out numbers for

Re: Tools classifying network traffic to applications

2005-09-22 Thread Joe Shen
hi, Christopher L. Morrow wrote: which can't really tell bittorrent (or ssh or aim or...) over tcp/80 from http over tcp/80... I think Joe's looking for something that knows what protocols look like below the port number and can spit out numbers for that... these, it would seem to

Re: Tools classifying network traffic to applications

2005-09-22 Thread Christopher L. Morrow
On Fri, 23 Sep 2005, Joe Shen wrote: hi, Christopher L. Morrow wrote: which can't really tell bittorrent (or ssh or aim or...) over tcp/80 from http over tcp/80... I think Joe's looking for something that knows what protocols look like below the port number and can spit out

Re: open source tools help (contract) in DC area?

2005-07-26 Thread Brad Knowles
, the interest is in open-source ISP tools. Syslog is a standard *nix administration tool, useful for system administrators but also used by network administrators and anyone else doing any kind of administration on a *nix box. RRD, MRTG, and Ethereal are standard *nix network and system

Re: open source tools help (contract) in DC area?

2005-07-26 Thread Joseph S D Yao
On Tue, Jul 26, 2005 at 04:30:14PM +0200, Brad Knowles wrote: ... I'm honestly trying to understand what is an on-topic post and what is not, and it seems to me that this is pretty clearly off-topic. So what is on-topic? I've got a question that I've been thinking about for a

open source tools help (contract) in DC area?

2005-07-25 Thread Howard C. Berkowitz
security lab exercises involving Cisco routers and switches, Slackware 10.0 LINUX servers and workstations, and Windows workstations, the latter to be infected with worms as part of running the lab. We need a *NIX administrator to help us get the appropriate, primarily open-source tools installed

Re: open source tools help (contract) in DC area?

2005-07-25 Thread Brad Knowles
At 1:12 PM -0400 2005-07-25, Howard C. Berkowitz wrote: I need to get some short-term contract help on setting up a lab dealing with SP security issues, in the Washington DC area. Please contact me offline if interested. I am the technoid and will pass you on for the mercenary aspects.

Re: open source tools help (contract) in DC area?

2005-07-25 Thread Fergie (Paul Ferguson)
for NANOG. It seems to me that you would be much better off going through SANS or SAGE to find local groups in the area that could be helpful to you. Actually, the interest is in open-source ISP tools. -- Fergie, a.k.a. Paul Ferguson Engineering Architecture for the Internet [EMAIL PROTECTED

IRR Power Tools Released

2004-12-29 Thread Adam Rothschild
Hello, Richard Steenbergen has released IRR Power Tools, a PHP and CVS-based framework for using IRR data to manage prefix-lists for BGP customers. You can learn more about his project at: http://sourceforge.net/projects/irrpt/ This seems particularly relevant given recent outages attributed

Netflow analysis best pratice and tools ?

2004-11-18 Thread Joe Shen
Hi, We plan to set up netflow analysis in our backbone. It's hoped to be able to track communication demand inside our AS as well as our AS and other ASes. It also expected to be able to support route optimization and to detect abnormal network behavior . And, report generation is needed too.

Enterprise Access Log Scanning Tools

2004-10-19 Thread Cullen, Michael
Greetings all, Does anyone have (1) any experience, (2) any suggestions, or (3) an appropriate contact to these types of tools? The requirements include ACE and NT Domain access logs. Thank You, Michael Cullen Senior Security Engineer Technical Architecture, Policy and Web

Re: Open-Source Network Management Tools

2004-09-29 Thread Pete Hoffswell
You can also look at NMIS http://www.sins.com.au/nmis/ Pete Hoffswell 616-732-1101 (Grand Rapids, x1101)University LAN/WAN Coordinator 616-510-1198 (Mobile)IT Services [EMAIL PROTECTED]Davenport University http://www.davenport.edu -=-=- LAN/WAN services: http://networker.davenport.edu -=-=-

RE: Open-Source Network Management Tools

2004-09-29 Thread Ben Polson
-Source Network Management Tools You can also look at NMIS http://www.sins.com.au/nmis/ Pete Hoffswell616-732-1101 (Grand Rapids, x1101) University LAN/WAN Coordinator 616-510-1198 (Mobile) IT Services [EMAIL PROTECTED] Davenport University

RE: Open-Source Network Management Tools

2004-09-29 Thread JDeane
The one item I've found missing in the open source NMS tools I've examined is functional and aesthetically pleasing mapping, i.e. the big picture network map with ability to drill down. If anyone has found a nifty solution for this please let me know! Regards, Jade Jade E. Deane Senior Network

RE: Open-Source Network Management Tools

2004-09-29 Thread Ben Polson
Have you looked at www.netdisco.org? -Ben. -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, September 29, 2004 1:12 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Open-Source Network Management Tools The one item I've found

Re: Open-Source Network Management Tools

2004-09-29 Thread Martin
$quoted_author = [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; The one item I've found missing in the open source NMS tools I've examined is functional and aesthetically pleasing mapping, i.e. the big picture network map with ability to drill down. If anyone has found a nifty solution for this please let me know

Re: Open-Source Network Management Tools

2004-09-17 Thread Alexei Roudnev
: Michael Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, September 15, 2004 9:10 AM Subject: RE: Open-Source Network Management Tools -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 I'm looking for open-source alternatives for network management, such as Nagios or Big Brother. We

Re: Open-Source Network Management Tools

2004-09-17 Thread Chris Allermann
analyzers + copmmercial soft, sometimes) when possible. - Original Message - From: Michael Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, September 15, 2004 9:10 AM Subject: RE: Open-Source Network Management Tools -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash

Re: Open-Source Network Management Tools

2004-09-17 Thread Suresh Ramasubramanian
Chris Allermann wrote: Just curious, what kind of commercial/opensource software do you use for syslog analysis and alerting? http://www.l0t3k.net/tools/Loganalysis/lire-1.4.tar.gz http://www.sawmill.net/features.html

Re: Open-Source Network Management Tools

2004-09-17 Thread Christian Kuhtz
) when possible. - Original Message - From: Michael Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, September 15, 2004 9:10 AM Subject: RE: Open-Source Network Management Tools -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 I'm looking for open-source

Re: Open-Source Network Management Tools

2004-09-17 Thread Jeremy Kister
On Tuesday, September 14, 2004 3:48 PM, Tom Claydon wrote: I'm looking for open-source alternatives for network management, such as Nagios or Big Brother. We are currently using WhatsUp Gold, and would Argus: The World's Most Advanced Monitoring System: http://argus.tcp4me.com/ Jeremy Kister

Re: Open-Source Network Management Tools

2004-09-17 Thread Alexei Roudnev
Syslog is a text protocol, so system developer can always write any message. SNMPTRAP is '1.2.3.4.5.6.7.8 'something happen blablabla' type of messages. They are the same in other properties, I do agree - that;s why we detect everything we can by 'polling'. There are many tools, converting one

RE: Open-Source Network Management Tools

2004-09-17 Thread Michael Smith
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 -Original Message- From: Alexei Roudnev [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Friday, September 17, 2004 12:53 AM To: Michael Smith; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Open-Source Network Management Tools I always tried to avoid any deal

Re: Open-Source Network Management Tools

2004-09-17 Thread Irwin Lazar
traps would be a plus for us as well. Recommendations? Thanks. Have a look at http://www.itprc.com/nms.htm - I put together a list of open source/free NMS tools a while ago, hopefully it is still somewhat current. irwin

Re: Open-Source Network Management Tools

2004-09-17 Thread Alexei Roudnev
] Sent: Friday, September 17, 2004 10:11 AM Subject: RE: Open-Source Network Management Tools -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 -Original Message- From: Alexei Roudnev [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Friday, September 17, 2004 12:53 AM To: Michael Smith; [EMAIL PROTECTED

Re: Open-Source Network Management Tools

2004-09-17 Thread Alexei Roudnev
:25 AM Subject: Re: Open-Source Network Management Tools Just curious, what kind of commercial/opensource software do you use for syslog analysis and alerting? I also run syslog-ng and have some filters written to ignore some of the more mundane syslog messages. Also have swatch half

Re: Open-Source Network Management Tools

2004-09-15 Thread Alexei Roudnev
: Open-Source Network Management Tools On Tue, Sep 14, 2004 at 02:47:45PM -0500, Claydon, Tom wrote: I'm looking for open-source alternatives for network management, such as Nagios or Big Brother. We are currently using WhatsUp Gold, and would like to move to something more flexible

Re: Open-Source Network Management Tools

2004-09-15 Thread Alexei Roudnev
Iglesias [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: 'Claydon, Tom' [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, September 14, 2004 1:09 PM Subject: RE: Open-Source Network Management Tools We have been using JFFNMS (http://www.jffnms.org) for the last 2 years and works just great. You can monitor almost

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