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He was only briefly in Apocalypse Now, but definitely left his mark. RIP to a Legend.

"Some day this war's gonna end.... [Walks off]"


Emit at your own peril

At first, was horrified... But, goes into using eBPF and IO_URING to collect system stats instead of all the huge overhead of userspace calls (ontop of dbus, ontop of Gnome).. This is pretty good.

https://anubis.techaro.lol/docs/admin/honeypot/overview The Anubis scraper protection has this as a feature. Just sends garbage if something falls into a trap.

Not the parent poster, but I also still use telnet. For me it's "Ancient", I have a few retired SPARC and PA-RISC boxes that run their period appropriate OSes as a hobby. Telnet/rlogin is the more reliable method to get into them remotely (just over the LAN).

They're on a LAN behind a NAT Router/Firewall, and I don't always keep them powered up (I'm not that insane) so I really don't have a concern for them.

Some of the more modern/high-performance examples I have run NetBSD with modern sshd and modern ciphers, but you can tell it's a bit of a workout for them.


good. god.

I think this is really neat. Been wanting to create an ESP32-based environment monitoring system for outside to replace the cheap 915 MHz weather station I have. CAN might not be a bad technology to do this with since I don't really want to have yet more things emitting around 2.4/5 GHz


This solution uses 2pair standard rj11 telephone cable(tested upto 15meters - can be longer) - one pair is for CAN-L/CAN-H and 2nd pair is for dc supply between 6v to 24v, esp32 firmware offers failsafe A/B upgrade mechanism over CAN.


The destination IP has some high-value octets, almost wondering if it's a software bug in something out there:

Address: 66.252.224.242 01000010.11111100.11100000. 11110010

Maybe a long forgotten server with some ancient malware that keeps being moved around...

Mysterious


The destination IP address is my server, the one being attacked. I don't see the significant of the high-value octets.


all good, probably just me seeing patterns.


this is very interesting... been watching the work around bootc coupling with composefs + dm_verity + signed UKI, I'm wondering if this will build upon that.


Glad to see SunOS/Solaris still alive in some form in the Open Source space. Had heard of Illumos and OpenIndiana, but didn't know about SmartOS. It's definitely won me over with the NetBSD pkgsrc package manager... Very nice.


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