I was actually considering rolling this out with where I'm at we use a different IdP, which has this same sort of functionality built in, but I'm not a fan of it..
Posts made by DustinB3403
-
RE: MeshCentral Future
-
RE: Troubleshooting poor network performance
@DustinB3403 said in Troubleshooting poor network performance:
Moving from that port which was only giving 10FDx to an unused port, gave us 1000FDx.
I'm not sure where this issue stems from..
Got it sorted out, for some reason (and I'm still working on the specifics) our ESXi hosts secondary NIC keeps falling to 10FDx (likely some misconfiguration at setup).
I've moved XO off of this nic, and performance has been fixed.
-
RE: Troubleshooting poor network performance
Moving from that port which was only giving 10FDx to an unused port, gave us 1000FDx.
I'm not sure where this issue stems from..
-
RE: Troubleshooting poor network performance
@jt1001001 I'm in office today, and moved the port from 34 to 33 and am now getting 1000FDx on the port and within ESXi.
So it's very odd.
-
RE: Troubleshooting poor network performance
The Dropped Tx percentage is 0.6 of all packets dropped...
-
RE: Troubleshooting poor network performance
In looking at the interface further, I do have quite a lot of dropped packets.
The switch has been up for 224d 16h 48m 21s
-
Troubleshooting poor network performance
Below is a screen capture of my NFS repos on Xen Orchestra, and the respective performance that I'm getting according to XO. I'm trying to sort out where my performance issues are stemming from and looking for some guidance.
All remotes were just re-tested for consistency.
After some digging around, I looked at my ESXi host (which is where XO is being run from - so its outside of the pool), and I noticed a 10MB Full Duplex NIC within ESXi.
I've looked at the switch port (an Aruba 2530) and find Port 34 at 10FDx.
If I attempt to manually set the port speed to 1000 FD, I get "Value 1000-full is not applicable to port 34"
If I check the network interface within XO, I get the below, which is not 10FDx...
A CLI Speed test shows
Would the next assumption be that this port is connected to a HUB and that physical re-cabling is going to be needed to address this?
-
RE: Miscellaneous Tech News
Seems more like a 3rd party issue that was introduced than it was an issue introduced by Wyze.
-
RE: dmarc
@pattonb p=none means to monitor for any messages, but take no action.
The “none” policy, also known as “monitor” tells the provider to take no action. The “quarantine” policy sends any unauthorized emails into a separate folder, similar to a spam folder. The “reject” policy tells the provider to block any unauthorized emails so that they cannot reach recipients
You can check your dmarc record's configuration with a tool like mxtoolbox.com to see if it comes back with the same results.
This may just be an issue with how
dig
is being used. -
RE: New Building Considerations ...
@scottalanmiller said in New Building Considerations ...:
Build a super dedicated, fully cooled, fully wired, LARGE space with room to move about data closet on a raised floor.
I'm in the camp of a consistent temperature, regardless if it's 72 or 80 degrees, doesn't matter to me.
Everywhere I've worked aside from datacenters, has had power outages and then concerns about condensation forming on/in equipment.
More resilient power to the AC unit with a properly setup UPS to shutdown in the event of a outage seems way more important than the rest.
I don't disagree with having space to work.
-
RE: Synology Cloud Sync - Export a CSV Log
@travisdh1 Yeah supposedly in /var/log/cloudsync, but this directory does not exist on the Synology.
I can pull other logs, which are in compressed .dat file, which are very extensive, but it doesn't list this detail, nearly as neatly or expressly.
-
Synology Cloud Sync - Export a CSV Log
Is anyone aware of a way to export the below logs to a CSV file? This is from a Synology DSM, using the built in "Cloud Sync" service.
-
RE: Define Air Gapped Networks
@IThomeboy80 said in Define Air Gapped Networks:
I think it is isolated from the rest of the network. This is to ensure that data and intellectual property are kept safely guarded.
Right, but isolated from the "rest of the network" doesn't mean that it is isolated from the rest of the world.
Or are you suggesting that it does?
-
Define Air Gapped Networks
When using terminology like "Air Gapped" what is your first impression of it?
When I see someone say they have an air gapped network, I think it to mean that the network is separate from the rest of the organization (through a physical disconnect), and that Air Gapped, does not imply the lack of internet.
Air Gapped != Without Internet
What's your opinion?
-
RE: What Are You Doing Right Now
@travisdh1 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@DustinB3403 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@GUIn00b said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Contemplating how to leverage 2 ISP's for supplemental bandwidth when needed using 2 separate routers that are both servicing the same LAN.
......So I'm gonna go post a new topic!
Get a DUAL Wan capable firewall, set it up either as Active/Active or Active/Backup.
You'll be banging your head sorting out getting a fault tolerant static IP address, though it can be done.
BGP..... that could be a whole series of topics itself.
Yup... and getting two different ISP's to play together is the fun part...
-
RE: What Are You Doing Right Now
@GUIn00b said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Contemplating how to leverage 2 ISP's for supplemental bandwidth when needed using 2 separate routers that are both servicing the same LAN.
......So I'm gonna go post a new topic!
Get a DUAL Wan capable firewall, set it up either as Active/Active or Active/Backup.
You'll be banging your head sorting out getting a fault tolerant static IP address, though it can be done.
-
RE: What Are You Doing Right Now
Working on some SOC 2 collections, while waiting for some warranty coverage on my car to be completed.
Nothing too special
-
RE: One app to rule them all
@nadnerB Does NextCloud check all of those boxes?
-
RE: SUDO - Coming to a Windows Server near you.
@EddieJennings said in SUDO - Coming to a Windows Server near you.:
I wonder if it the application will behave the same. Meaning there will be an equivalent to
/etc/sudoers
,/etc/sudoers.d/
and such.When was the last time that Microsoft developed useful software? They tend to just (buy/steal) whatever, plop it into their OS and let it languish without any fixes, patches, etc.
I doubt this will be any different, but it is a potentially useful change.
-
RE: New Building Considerations ...
@BraswellJay said in New Building Considerations ...:
Our leadership is discussing possibly building a new facility over the next few years. What would be some things you would take into consideration for a new building design if you could start fresh with a blank slate.
The one's I initially think of are planning networking for WAN, LAN, wireless and phones. Also server, workstation and processing equipment planning. Access control and cameras.
An avoidance of stairs and or safety harnesses to get to the networking/server room.
You never want to have to lug equipment up flights of stairs or use a scissor lift to get to the equipment installation/service location.
Legit issue I had to deal with years ago...