#cisco
02 January 2008
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09:01 <****> like comcast, rr, ool and others
09:04 <****> :S
09:24 <****> what the fuck are you trying to say?
09:26 * NameBrand yawns
09:50 <****> hi there
09:50 <****> someone can take a look on my logfile? http://internetworkpro.org/pastebin/1571
09:50 <****> I can't establish an VPN connection
10:00 <****> el_mexicano: Clear Your SAs and paste logs from both sides (especially from the listener side)
10:05 <****> how to do that? I a newbie with with cisco
10:07 <****> While trying to retrieve the URL: http://internetworkpro.org/pastebin/1571
10:07 <****> The following error was encountered:
10:07 <****> Connection to 65.61.168.201 Failed
10:07 <****> try again
10:07 <****> (110) Connection timed out
10:07 <****> works here
10:07 <****> Hasn't worked for ages here -_-
10:08 <****> you suck at teh internets then
10:08 <****> *Australia sucks
10:09 <****> fuckin dingos chewing on the fiber optic lines
10:10 <****> Whats this fibre you talk of?
10:11 <****> you know, the stuff that carries data?
10:11 <****> transmits light
10:11 <****> Australia have fibre
10:11 <****> lawl
10:11 <****> huh?
10:12 <****> Maybe in captital cities, although the rest of Australia's internet runs on hopes and dreams
10:12 <****> neat.
10:15 <****> I thought it was RFC 1149
10:17 <****> how to clear the SA's ?
10:18 <****> clear crypto isakmp sa
10:18 <****> something like that
10:18 <****> damn i gotta go to bed, been fighting hackers for 10 hours, was rather unexpected
10:19 <****> fighting hackers :S
10:20 <****> what were they doing?
10:20 <****> yeah, they root some boxes, gotta fish them out
10:20 <****> there can't be anything that's a bigger pain
10:21 <****> and i get to see cool things like 1337 for port numbers, and shit that says 0wned
10:22 <****> i'd prefer to go to bed :)
10:24 <****> hi all. we have a cisco aironet 1200 ap here, and i'm trying to configure it so that new sessions are redirected to a welcome/splash screen in their browser, and they are then authenticated. is that possible?
10:26 <****> What type of authincation?
10:26 <****> i don't believe you can do something like that on the ap, a proxy server would do that
10:27 <****> search for it in google, plenty of people sell that software
10:27 <****> You can easily do it with a squid setup
10:27 <****> by authentication, i mean access to all websites
10:27 <****> ah ok, thanks
10:27 <****> catfox: but erm
10:27 <****> how? like using a http username / password or
10:27 <****> using peap / leap
10:27 <****> or something?
10:28 <****> that's the shit they have at hotels, you use a proxy
10:29 <****> TheSkorm: no really. i just want users to be directed to a certain page when they try to access the web for the first time in their current session, and from then on they're not redirected
10:30 <****> IPv6Freely__: The file transfer rate within a cable, dsl ISP's network
10:30 <****> rate speed
10:30 <****> rate = speed
10:30 <****> i'll look into doing it with squid - do you know what this technique/type of configuration is called?
10:30 <****> Squid proxy with a homemade script i suppose
10:31 <****> catfox: look up upside-down-ternet in google
10:31 <****> might help
10:31 <****> thanks, will do
10:31 <****> No one?
10:32 <****> What is the file transfer rate within a cable, dsl ISP's network in the US, Europe?
10:34 <****> good evening!
10:35 <****> depends what you are supporting, e.g., 10gbe link to backbone with 1gbe radials is fairly common at a concentration point. where you are looking, e.g., some remote terminals are backhauled using only 1 or 2 t-1's.
10:36 <****> hi cisco nerds
10:36 <****> herrow pello
10:36 <****> I only work with cisco r00ters 5 days a week, 8 hours a day
10:36 <****> and have a nice cisco home network
10:37 <****> not really nerd worthy
10:37 <****> Mahmoud: What is the transfer rate within the ISP's network for you? I believe you are in the middle east?
10:37 <****> i have adsl 1Mbps.. i guess the maximum is 10Mbps? but it's horribly expensive
10:37 <****> TheSkorm: I'd say, that's ok
10:38 <****> within an ISP's network?
10:38 <****> own+ network
10:38 <****> Coperate network
10:39 <****> 100 1mb/s adsl users can typically be supported with 1mb/s of backbone, but with a floor of 20mb/s or so needed.
10:40 <****> but the exact ratio depends on your user population, 100:1 works for "mature" client bases i.e. those that include a fairly good proportion of plain folks that mostly just check e-mail and watch a little youtube.
10:42 <****> if your client base is bleeding edge (this is the first high-speed offerring in the area) you can expect more techie types and a much higher incidence of p2p, which can drop that ratio to 5:1 (or so) or even 1:1 (worst case -- some .au isp's claim to see this).
10:43 <****> fsck, how it's possible to make an upgrade because of a bug, if that bug makes it impossible? :-)
10:43 <****> %Error writing disk0:/asa803-k8.bin (Cannot allocate memory)
10:43 <****> often you have to use rommon for those sorts of things.
10:45 <****> Yeah, I know, but it's pretty annoying
11:06 <****> Well
11:06 <****> A cable, DSL provider usually has more than 10,000 people using the internet at night
11:06 <****> and during the day
11:07 <****> That is a sound customer base
11:08 <****> depends where you are, but yes you'd be happier with a goodly number of customers than a small number.
11:08 <****> transferring large ammount or large sized files in my scenario is normal
11:08 <****> if your 10k customers are "normal", not bleeding edge types, you can probably get away with that 100:1 ratio.
11:09 <****> Haris: get a leased line, adsl isn't for you then
11:09 <****> I wouldn't call the general public's use of the internet 'bleeding edge'. Yes, they are not
11:09 <****> if you specifically pander to p2p types then 5:1 or lower might have to be used.
11:09 <****> I'm talking about a software house having multiple branches, who use the same ISP
11:09 <****> 's cable or dsl service
11:10 <****> what's the point of these questions?
11:10 <****> for transferring source code/files
11:10 <****> indeed
11:10 <****> what the fscking point?
11:10 <****> it's not a cisco question, get out!
11:10 <****> The Q was if ISPs in the US allow for higher data rates within the ISP's own network
11:10 <****> you obviously aren't planning to create such an isp, so what is it about the scenario that you are drilling to understand?
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