Re: BGP and convergence time

2010-05-12 Thread Richard A Steenbergen
On Wed, May 12, 2010 at 09:52:48AM -0600, Danny McPherson wrote: > > The holdtime isn't technically negotiated, both sides convey their > value in the open message and the lower of the two is used by both BGP > speakers. IIRC, neither J or C reset the session with the timer > change, but the new

Re: BGP (in)security makes the AP wire

2010-05-12 Thread Jeroen van Aart
Randy Bush wrote: except we have a history of it happening You mean the whole innertubes went down because some dewd haxx0red it? I believe that was the claim being made in so many words (maybe he was just trying to land that DARPA job). It's one thing for parts of the innertubes to go down,

Re: Rugged wireless bridge

2010-05-12 Thread Pete Carah
On 05/12/2010 08:30 PM, Pete Carah wrote: > On 05/12/2010 07:23 PM, Andrey Khomyakov wrote: > >> I found this sucker so far, I guess it has to be waterproof rather than just >> rugged. >> >> http://www.korenixsecurity.com/products/weatherproof-ethernet-switch/jetnet-3706-rj >> >> >> >>

Re: Rugged wireless bridge

2010-05-12 Thread Pete Carah
On 05/12/2010 07:23 PM, Andrey Khomyakov wrote: > I found this sucker so far, I guess it has to be waterproof rather than just > rugged. > > http://www.korenixsecurity.com/products/weatherproof-ethernet-switch/jetnet-3706-rj > > > And, http://www.sixnet.com/product/8-port-ip67-ethernet-managed-

Re: Rugged wireless bridge

2010-05-12 Thread Andrey Khomyakov
I found this sucker so far, I guess it has to be waterproof rather than just rugged. http://www.korenixsecurity.com/products/weatherproof-ethernet-switch/jetnet-3706-rj On May 12, 2010, at 7:11 PM, Mike Lyon wrote: > Not sure how outdoor-worthy those guys are... > > -Mike > > > On Wed, May

Re: Rugged wireless bridge

2010-05-12 Thread Seth Mattinen
On 5/12/2010 16:11, Mike Lyon wrote: > Not sure how outdoor-worthy those guys are... > Put them in a box. ~Seth

Re: Rugged wireless bridge

2010-05-12 Thread Andrey Khomyakov
I got a two floor parking ram and a surface lot, so in a nut shell I have to do this twice. Two separate wifi links, two PoE switches 4-6 cameras at each location plus the entrance gates all IP enabled. Andrey On May 12, 2010, at 7:00 PM, Mike Lyon wrote: > Andrey, > > Some of the UBNT gear

Re: Rugged wireless bridge

2010-05-12 Thread Mike Lyon
Not sure how outdoor-worthy those guys are... -Mike On Wed, May 12, 2010 at 4:04 PM, Seth Mattinen wrote: > On 5/12/2010 15:53, Andrey Khomyakov wrote: > > Hi all again > > > > Thanks for all the links. Lots of wifi solutions. The main problem I'm > facing is the fact that I need more than one

Re: Rugged wireless bridge

2010-05-12 Thread Seth Mattinen
On 5/12/2010 15:53, Andrey Khomyakov wrote: > Hi all again > > Thanks for all the links. Lots of wifi solutions. The main problem I'm facing > is the fact that I need more than one copper ethernet connection at those > outdoor locations. Meaning that I'll have at least two or three IP cameras >

Re: Rugged wireless bridge

2010-05-12 Thread Pete Carah
On 05/12/2010 06:53 PM, Andrey Khomyakov wrote: > Hi all again > > Thanks for all the links. Lots of wifi solutions. The main problem I'm facing > is the fact that I need more than one copper ethernet connection at those > outdoor locations. Meaning that I'll have at least two or three IP cameras

Re: Rugged wireless bridge

2010-05-12 Thread Mike Lyon
Andrey, Some of the UBNT gear have two ethernet ports, some models pass PoE, some don't. What I would do is to get a switch with or without PoE, put them into a NEMA 4 enclosure. Then put water-proof ethernet feedthrough bushings on the enclosure. How many locations do you have to do this at? -

Re: Rugged wireless bridge

2010-05-12 Thread Andrey Khomyakov
Hi all again Thanks for all the links. Lots of wifi solutions. The main problem I'm facing is the fact that I need more than one copper ethernet connection at those outdoor locations. Meaning that I'll have at least two or three IP cameras (PoE desired) and a automatic security gate. So, I feel

Re: 3G Network Internet Traffic Patterns?

2010-05-12 Thread Mikael Abrahamsson
On Wed, 12 May 2010, Russell Berg wrote: We have the opportunity to provide Internet connectivity to a newly forming 3G cellular provider in a mostly rural area. Our current wholesale ISP customer base is predominantly residential; our current peak traffic period is consistently between 8PM-10

Re: Rugged wireless bridge

2010-05-12 Thread Hugh Irvine
I've had the same problems with the WAP200E units - 3 DOA before getting two that worked. regards Hugh On 12 May 2010, at 02:02, Shane Short wrote: > I've had multiple issues with the WAP200E units in the field-- from the > Internal PoE cabling being crushed and not working properly, to fin

Re: BGP and convergence time

2010-05-12 Thread Scott Weeks
--- matt...@walster.org wrote: From: Matthew Walster On 12 May 2010 02:36, Scott Weeks wrote: > You set the timers on your side and the two sides negotiate then select the > lowest timer settings. The BGP session automatically hard resets on some > equipment when changing the timers, so be

Re: BGP and convergence time

2010-05-12 Thread Scott Weeks
--- da...@tcb.net wrote: From: Danny McPherson On May 12, 2010, at 9:40 AM, Jay Nakamura wrote: > I just tested this and, yes, with Cisco to Cisco, changing the setting > won't reset the connection but you have to reset the connection to > have the value take effect. I need to look up what hap

3G Network Internet Traffic Patterns?

2010-05-12 Thread Russell Berg
We have the opportunity to provide Internet connectivity to a newly forming 3G cellular provider in a mostly rural area. Our current wholesale ISP customer base is predominantly residential; our current peak traffic period is consistently between 8PM-10PM. Does anyone have traffic info or a gra

Re: CIDR blocks, by country

2010-05-12 Thread Rich Kulawiec
On Wed, May 12, 2010 at 12:09:57PM -0400, Michael Holstein wrote: > I am aware of sites that list all the netblocks associated with China > (for example) .. is there any place that publishes an updated list of > what netblocks are used by what countries? (all of them) .. CIDR format > would be idea

Re: CIDR blocks, by country

2010-05-12 Thread Andree Toonk
Hi Michael, .-- My secret spy satellite informs me that at 12/05/10 9:09 AM Michael Holstein wrote: I am aware of sites that list all the netblocks associated with China (for example) .. is there any place that publishes an updated list of what netblocks are used by what countries? (all of the

Re: CIDR blocks, by country

2010-05-12 Thread Chris Adams
Once upon a time, Blake Pfankuch said: > http://countries.nerd.dk/ publishes files that can be used in some form of an > RBL that covers most of this as well. I use this for a geolocated DNS system > and it works well. I have actually manually referenced this to find where a > specific block

Re: Dial Concentrators - TNT / APX8000 R.I.P.

2010-05-12 Thread Jared Mauch
On May 12, 2010, at 12:56 PM, JC Dill wrote: > You *can* still buy brand new buggy whips: > > http://www.jedediahsbuggywhip.com/ > http://www.drivingessentials.com/Whips.htm I get my wooden oars and paddles here: http://www.shawandtenney.com/ They are great and work well on the double-ended r

Re: Dial Concentrators - TNT / APX8000 R.I.P.

2010-05-12 Thread JC Dill
Mark Foster wrote: On Wed, May 12, 2010 4:38 am, Justin Wilson wrote: There are those ppl who just want to do e-mail, are comfortable with dial-up, don¹t want to pay for than $5-10 for internet, and can¹t get anything else. Indeed. The arguments for alternatives based on the fact they

Re: CIDR blocks, by country

2010-05-12 Thread Sherwin Ang
For the whole APNIC: http://www.apnic.net/publications/research-and-insights/ip-address-trends/apnic-resource-range ftp://ftp.apnic.net/apnic/stats/ carries raw data files updated daily for all allocations in a delimited file format. you may have to do some sorting, what i do is put it in a mys

RE: CIDR blocks, by country

2010-05-12 Thread Blake Pfankuch
http://countries.nerd.dk/ publishes files that can be used in some form of an RBL that covers most of this as well. I use this for a geolocated DNS system and it works well. I have actually manually referenced this to find where a specific block is from. -Original Message- From: Larr

Re: CIDR blocks, by country

2010-05-12 Thread Chris Campbell
Maxmind or Quova offer a commercial database if that’s what you need. Maxmind also do a less frequently updated free version. On 12/05/2010 17:09, "Michael Holstein" wrote: I am aware of sites that list all the netblocks associated with China (for example) .. is there any place that publishes

Re: CIDR blocks, by country

2010-05-12 Thread Larry Smith
On Wed May 12 2010 11:09, Michael Holstein wrote: > I am aware of sites that list all the netblocks associated with China > (for example) .. is there any place that publishes an updated list of > what netblocks are used by what countries? (all of them) .. CIDR format > would be ideal. > > If it mat

CIDR blocks, by country

2010-05-12 Thread Michael Holstein
I am aware of sites that list all the netblocks associated with China (for example) .. is there any place that publishes an updated list of what netblocks are used by what countries? (all of them) .. CIDR format would be ideal. If it matters, I'm specifically interested APNIC and AFRNIC. Regards,

RE: IPv4 Multicast

2010-05-12 Thread Rens
I have done some tests with multicast streams, sender & receivers all in the same layer 2 vlan, but I also have a pc with just wireshark and I can see all this traffic. I can see that IGMP is enabled on all interfaces but do I need enable something else? Vlan 200: IGMP snooping

Re: BGP and convergence time

2010-05-12 Thread Danny McPherson
On May 12, 2010, at 9:40 AM, Jay Nakamura wrote: > > I just tested this and, yes, with Cisco to Cisco, changing the setting > won't reset the connection but you have to reset the connection to > have the value take effect. I need to look up what happens when two > sides are set to different val

Re: BGP and convergence time

2010-05-12 Thread Jay Nakamura
On Wed, May 12, 2010 at 11:02 AM, Matthew Walster wrote: > On 12 May 2010 02:36, Scott Weeks wrote: >> You set the timers on your side and the two sides negotiate then select the >> lowest timer settings.  The BGP session automatically hard resets on some >> equipment when changing the timers,

Re: BGP and convergence time

2010-05-12 Thread Matthew Walster
On 12 May 2010 02:36, Scott Weeks wrote: > You set the timers on your side and the two sides negotiate then select the > lowest timer settings.  The BGP session automatically hard resets on some > equipment when changing the timers, so be aware of that. Hold timers are negotiated in the OPEN me

Re: Dial Concentrators - TNT / APX8000 R.I.P.

2010-05-12 Thread sthaug
> I've heard of some LECs starting to mull dropping frame relay as a > supported service as well... The provider I work for stopped selling Frame Relay four years ago. However, we didn't throw out the last Nortel Passport switches until about one year ago. Steinar Haug, Nethelp consulting, sth..