Zabbix Template for Cisco 7606

2014-03-18 Thread Shahab Vahabzadeh
Hi everybody, Any body has template for zabbix for Cisco 7606? I need: - In/Out interface traffic, uptime, cpu & memory utilization, temperatures, ... - Graph and Trigger Thanks -- Regards, Shahab Vahabzadeh, Network Engineer and System Administrator Cell Phone: +1 (415) 871 0742 PGP

Re: Fusion Splicer

2014-03-18 Thread Pui Edylie
Hi Shawn, Maybe 3K USD but i am open to any recommendation. The usage is going to be almost daily It seems Fujikura is the top contender Cheers On 3/18/2014 8:35 PM, Shawn L wrote: It depends on what you mean by affordable and how much you're going to use it. On Tue, Mar 18, 2014 at 4:

Re: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread Jeremy Bresley
On 3/18/2014 6:11 PM, Jay Ashworth wrote: From: "Randy" I have a situation where a 208v/20A PDU (L6-20P) is supposedly hooked to a 208v/30A circuit (L6-30R). Before I order the correct PDU's and whip cords...sanity check...are connectors 'similar' enough that this is possible (with force) or am

Re: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread Wayne E Bouchard
On Tue, Mar 18, 2014 at 09:39:46PM -0400, William Herrin wrote: > There just aren't a whole lot of failure modes here that result in > fire short of one or the other breaker failing. And that results in > fire regardless of the amperage mismatch. > > > This, by the way, is why you're allowed to p

Re: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread Larry Sheldon
On 3/18/2014 2:24 PM, Randy wrote: I have a situation where a 208v/20A PDU (L6-20P) is supposedly hooked to a 208v/30A circuit (L6-30R). Before I order the correct PDU's and whip cords...sanity check...are connectors 'similar' enough that this is possible (with force) or am I going to find we'v

Re: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread William Herrin
On Tue, Mar 18, 2014 at 6:54 PM, Niels Bakker wrote: > * w...@typo.org (Wayne E Bouchard) [Tue 18 Mar 2014, 23:53 CET]: >> I have had to do this at times but it is not strictly allowed by codes and >> not at all recommended. > > It's an active fire hazard. The cables aren't rated (= built) for th

Re: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread Laszlo Hanyecz
It's temporary unless it works. -Laszlo On Mar 18, 2014, at 11:30 PM, Jay Ashworth wrote: > - Original Message - >> From: "Stephen Sprunk" > >> On 18-Mar-14 17:54, Niels Bakker wrote: >>> * w...@typo.org (Wayne E Bouchard) [Tue 18 Mar 2014, 23:53 CET]: I have had to do this at t

Re: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread Jay Ashworth
- Original Message - > From: "Stephen Sprunk" > On 18-Mar-14 17:54, Niels Bakker wrote: > > * w...@typo.org (Wayne E Bouchard) [Tue 18 Mar 2014, 23:53 CET]: > >> I have had to do this at times but it is not strictly allowed by > >> codes and not at all recommended. > > > > It's an active

Re: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread Randy Carpenter
- Original Message - > On 18-Mar-14 17:54, Niels Bakker wrote: > > * w...@typo.org (Wayne E Bouchard) [Tue 18 Mar 2014, 23:53 CET]: > >> I have had to do this at times but it is not strictly allowed by > >> codes and not at all recommended. > > > > It's an active fire hazard. The cables a

Re: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread Randy
On 03/18/2014 7:11 pm, Jay Ashworth wrote: As it happens, the chart at http://www.stayonline.com/reference-nema-locking.aspx suggests that the L6-20 and L6-30 are less different than you'd expect. I *think* those are on different diameters, and a datacenter employee ought to friggin' know b

RE: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread Alex Rubenstein
Go look at any standard household lamp. It has a 5-15P on the end of it, which could be plugged into an outlet rated for 20 amps (5-20R), with 16 gauge lamp cord rated for 10 amps or less. It all depends on the connected load. > * w...@typo.org (Wayne E Bouchard) [Tue 18 Mar 2014, 23:53 CET]:

RE: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread Alex Rubenstein
Strictly speaking, no, you cannot do this. The diameter of the pattern of the pins are different 20 to 30 amps. If no electrical inspectors are looking, yes, you can bend the pins and "make it work." I've done it, others have done it, but you shouldn't do it and it is a clear electrical code vi

Re: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread Stephen Sprunk
On 18-Mar-14 17:54, Niels Bakker wrote: > * w...@typo.org (Wayne E Bouchard) [Tue 18 Mar 2014, 23:53 CET]: >> I have had to do this at times but it is not strictly allowed by >> codes and not at all recommended. > > It's an active fire hazard. The cables aren't rated (= built) for the > power draw

Re: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread Jay Ashworth
- Original Message - > From: "Randy" > I have a situation where a 208v/20A PDU (L6-20P) is supposedly hooked to > a 208v/30A circuit (L6-30R). Before I order the correct PDU's and whip > cords...sanity check...are connectors 'similar' enough that this is > possible (with force) or am I go

Re: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread Justin M. Streiner
On Tue, 18 Mar 2014, Randy wrote: I have a situation where a 208v/20A PDU (L6-20P) is supposedly hooked to a 208v/30A circuit (L6-30R). Before I order the correct PDU's and whip cords...sanity check...are connectors 'similar' enough that this is possible (with force) or am I going to find we

RE: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread David Hubbard
I've had to do that before; provider gave me a 208v/30a circuit and I already had a power strip I wanted to re-use that had a corded L6-20P connector on it. I purchased a L6-30P plug / L6-20R receptacle adapter from http://www.stayonline.com/nema-locking-6-30-amp-adapters.aspx They're only $25 and

Re: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread George Herbert
Crap, was looking at the non-locking ones. Ignore that. On Tue, Mar 18, 2014 at 3:54 PM, George Herbert wrote: > > https://www.21cii.com/ITStudio/Content/Resources/Images/Appendix/Plug%20&%20Power/SB%202P-3W_505x447.png > > I think the 250 v 15 amp plugs fit in the 20 amp sockets, but the 20s >

Re: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread Andrei Ivanov
Randy wrote: > >I have a situation where a 208v/20A PDU (L6-20P) is supposedly hooked to >a 208v/30A circuit (L6-30R).   Before I order the correct PDU's and whip >cords...sanity check...are connectors 'similar' enough that this is >possible (with force) or am I going to find we've actually got

Re: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread George Herbert
https://www.21cii.com/ITStudio/Content/Resources/Images/Appendix/Plug%20&%20Power/SB%202P-3W_505x447.png I think the 250 v 15 amp plugs fit in the 20 amp sockets, but the 20s don't fit in the 30 sockets. This sort of thing is usually an adapter, a little cylinder with a L6-20R on one end and a L6

Re: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread Michael Brown
‎The connectors are definitely distinct and incompatible, you won't be able to force a 20 into a 30 or vice versa.  So yes, one of the ends has been changed. M.   Original Message   From: Randy Sent: Tuesday, March 18, 2014 18:42 To: nanog@nanog.org Reply To: a...@djlab.com Subject: L6-20P -> L

Re: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread Niels Bakker
* w...@typo.org (Wayne E Bouchard) [Tue 18 Mar 2014, 23:53 CET]: I have had to do this at times but it is not strictly allowed by codes and not at all recommended. It's an active fire hazard. The cables aren't rated (= built) for the power draw. -- Niels.

Re: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread Wayne E Bouchard
The whole point behind the locking connectors (like the IEC connectors) is to prevent you from plugging the wrong connectors together. Not only are the different dimensions, but the prongs are keyed differently as well. If you put a L6-20P device into a L6-30R, then it was done by physically repla

Re: L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread Mike Hale
They're different. You can't force them. On Tue, Mar 18, 2014 at 12:24 PM, Randy wrote: > I have a situation where a 208v/20A PDU (L6-20P) is supposedly hooked to a > 208v/30A circuit (L6-30R). Before I order the correct PDU's and whip > cords...sanity check...are connectors 'similar' enough t

L6-20P -> L6-30R

2014-03-18 Thread Randy
I have a situation where a 208v/20A PDU (L6-20P) is supposedly hooked to a 208v/30A circuit (L6-30R). Before I order the correct PDU's and whip cords...sanity check...are connectors 'similar' enough that this is possible (with force) or am I going to find we've actually got L6-20R's on the pr

Re: pay.gov and IPv6

2014-03-18 Thread Curtis, Bruce
www.eda.gov has been broken since January. It has a record but when clients connect via IPv6 they see "Bad Request (Invalid Hostname)” rather than the web site. On Mar 17, 2014, at 1:43 PM, Matthew Kaufman wrote: > Random IPv6 complaint of the day: redirects from FCC.gov to pay.gov fai

Re: NetBSD as a TimeCapsule?

2014-03-18 Thread joel jaeggli
On 3/18/14, 11:53 AM, Rob Seastrom wrote: > > Atticus writes: > >> Use avahi. > > Isn't that built into netatalk3? netatalk does the mdns for my afp shares and seems to work. > -r > > signature.asc Description: OpenPGP digital signature

Re: NetBSD as a TimeCapsule?

2014-03-18 Thread Rob Seastrom
Atticus writes: > Use avahi. Isn't that built into netatalk3? -r

Re: ATT Postmaster Contact

2014-03-18 Thread Tim Burke
I've had decent luck reaching out to abuse_...@abuse-att.net, any other method of contact seems to just go to /dev/null. It does generally take longer than 2 days to hear back, patience is a virtue. - Original Message - From: "Robert Webb" To: "Suresh Ramasubramanian" Cc: nanog@nanog.o

Re: Fusion Splicer

2014-03-18 Thread Shawn L
It depends on what you mean by affordable and how much you're going to use it. On Tue, Mar 18, 2014 at 4:47 AM, Pui Edylie wrote: > Dear Member, > > Anyone can recommend a reliable and "affordable" fusion splicer please? > > Thanks! > > >

NetBSD as a TimeCapsule?

2014-03-18 Thread Atticus
Use avahi.

Fusion Splicer

2014-03-18 Thread Pui Edylie
Dear Member, Anyone can recommend a reliable and "affordable" fusion splicer please? Thanks!