In addition to equvinox (hey again):
In enterprise networks you should rely on 802.1x or what's also valid use case is the use of ipsec to ensure the local client connection is "safe".
Some 802.1x have inherent mitm attacks that have been called out since 2004 and never got the v2 (https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc6677.html). EAP-TLS however is the best practice here + VLANs.
I.e. bird detects interface failure but this affects only your side of decision making.
For bidirectional failure detection you do BFD with BGB. BFD default timers are 3 times 30 ms, iirc.
You can configure your assigned network numbers that other AS are allowed to announce certain networks of your own. Not uncommon for in examples authoritative name server addresses.
Worth mentioning that links at home can use them too, jumbo frame support was rare at one point but now you can get them on really cheap basic switches if you're looking for it. Even incredibly cheap $30 (literally, that's what a 5 port UniFi flex mini lists for direct) switches support them now. Not just an exotic thing for data centers anymore, and it can cut down on overhead within a LAN particularly as you get into 10/25/40/100 Gbps stuff to your own NAS/SAN or whatever.
The issue is; in the default free zone, every peer which gives you a full table, gives you 1 million routes. Core infrastructure is not getting refreshed every 5 year, I have heard so...
> That’s how I see time, it is the ordering of physical events, which we can trivially observe.
My teacher explained it in a similar way. Time passes when we can observe change. If there is no change then we can not measure time.
Like with the heat death of the universe. At that time (lol) no more time would "happening".
What I ask myself is: is time purely the ordering of things that happen, or do gaps where there is potential for something to happen also count?
Let's assume for simplicity that time is a discrete dimension, which it might be. Then there would be a measure of distance of how many ticks of potential events there are between two actual events, even if nothing happened in between. Or maybe that's not the case and it's more of a directed graph defining the partial ordering of actual events.
Not sure if we could measure that in any case, we always need some kind of actually ticking clock, and it's not like we can isolate a period of time where nothing happens globally, unless its in a simulation. Just like weird things happen at quantum scale, I'm sure weird things happen at small enough time scales where there's really nothing between one event and the next, and there's no good way to determine how far a part they are.
- every young adult get information material about the Musterung
- everyone is free to go there and free to go to do the basic training
- just in case we will have to few volunteers then the state can at first force everyone to go to the evaluation as it was before
- if we will have to few recruits then next step is a loot box system
- then and only then the state can force you. But this has also limits as we are still in Germany
Yes it was a shitty move by Merz to not involve the actual effected generation but I would have expected a far much worst law then this.
See ssh_config and ssh-keygen man-pages...
reply