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Comments
You've made your point
It's now time to move along
Do you worship him, as well?
@Francisco said he would deal with the situation as along as a valid PCAP file was provided. If it happens very rarely, there's little value to reinvent the wheel for this one issue.
If you have any experience with XDP and eBPF, you'd know full well its capability for dropping packets at linerate before the socket buffers are allocated in the Linux kernel.
Nope, not in the slightest, but everyone here knows how to be a decent human being, unlike you.
Now as the moderator has said, let's all move on.
Guess what? I did in fact provide a valid file to support, they did absolutely nothing.
lol... please stop
Gaslighting?
@vitalis3 is tinyweasel If no one has figured it out yet.
Bye tiny!
Pretty sure everyone knew that but was just letting him go to see what he'd say or do next lol
bye tiny .. we are waiting for your come back
Something about these LowEndComplainers is what gives me something to read with my morning coffee. You're paying less than $10-15/mo and expect for a service to spoon feed you full protection and to be given everything on a silver platter. If you expect that, then go purchase MANAGED services at the higher rate and boom problems solved.
I don't understand, what is tiny weasel supposed to mean
https://lowendtalk.com/profile/tinyweasel
Things like this always make me grimace a bit. So close to pointing out why the industry needs to rip off the bandage and move to IPv6, without being cognizant of why or how they're so close.
OSes have supported it reasonably well for a couple of decades. Most major services are dual-stacked anymore. We're at the point of people complaining to their ISPs that "$randomSmallPersonalSite can't be reached but I can on my phone!"
A whole new world of networking awaits us as low-end enthusiasts, with new and different (though not altogether better) challenges. One of them being that threat models change. I fully expect that when people start converting their servers en masse to IPv6, we'll start seeing a new flavor of skiddie. And, honestly, I'm bored of being on like the third or fourth generation using the same exact tools. But hey, at least source routing isn't still a thing for anyone. Right? Right? >.>
Where does using VLANs eat up more IP's?
I think the logic is that one might want to use a subnet per VLAN, and each subnet is a minimum of 3 IPs: network, host, broadcast.