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George H.W. oval office posted:Lmao if you don’t contract out any and all cabling to some tradesman who will do it faster Lmao if you don't just put your networking into the cloud.
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# ? Jan 3, 2019 05:52 |
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# ? May 25, 2024 13:34 |
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bull3964 posted:I would have to pull the colorblind card on that one and instantly make them wonder if they made a discriminatory question. They would not wonder
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# ? Jan 3, 2019 06:03 |
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adorai posted:Lmao if you don't just put your networking into the cloud. Lmao if you work. I'm cashing in on that unlimited PTO.
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# ? Jan 3, 2019 06:57 |
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Methanar posted:lol if you're using cable in 2019. Do you even FTTD Vulture Culture fucked around with this message at 12:45 on Jan 3, 2019 |
# ? Jan 3, 2019 12:39 |
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Any interest in reviving that IT book club from a couple years back? I've got a good backlog of books from the holidays and that thing always helped me keep good notes.
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# ? Jan 3, 2019 12:43 |
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Vulture Culture posted:Any interest in reviving that IT book club from a couple years back? I've got a good backlog of books from the holidays and that thing always helped me keep good notes. I’m game
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# ? Jan 3, 2019 13:44 |
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Yeah!
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# ? Jan 3, 2019 14:03 |
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Shoutout to the shithead local MSP I used to work for that would send woefully unprepared and inexperienced helpdesk guys out to do all-day cable runs and then complain about ticket volume.
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# ? Jan 3, 2019 14:32 |
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I used to have to hand crimp cables, but they were always specialty cables for whatever loving robot/automation we used out on the plant floor. Also scales.
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# ? Jan 3, 2019 14:34 |
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Spring Heeled Jack posted:Shoutout to the shithead local MSP I used to work for that would send woefully unprepared and inexperienced helpdesk guys out to do all-day cable runs and then complain about ticket volume. We're already paying their salary so this is at no cost to us!
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# ? Jan 3, 2019 15:11 |
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Hmm it's almost as if those helpdesk people could be working on... tickets?
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# ? Jan 3, 2019 15:15 |
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We got our pentest results back today. The vulnerabilities our team(network) found and reported to both the application and server groups in writing, 6 months ago, were the biggest things hit on the audit. Imagine that... The main homepage had a unrestricted ASP relay. Several users' passwords were dictionary guessed, several others compromised because their passwords were listed in public dumps and exploited against the office 365 portal. A few had citrix application access, which was then exploited using an old method to get a CMD shell on the local Xenservers that hadn't been patched since God knows when. That, was in turn used to open powershell sessions with God rights on pretty much any server they wanted. We have it in writing warning the other IT groups that this poo poo was not right, now they have it from from an outside source. At least they didn't find the AWS site that is still listening, despite our warnings, on port 80 and passing AD creds in the clear.
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 02:18 |
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Vulture Culture posted:Any interest in reviving that IT book club from a couple years back? I've got a good backlog of books from the holidays and that thing always helped me keep good notes. I’m interested, are we starting a separate thread?
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 02:40 |
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The old one is still around, just dead https://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=3698237
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 02:51 |
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Farking Bastage posted:We got our pentest results back today. This is that good good poo poo
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 03:07 |
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Docjowles posted:The old one is still around, just dead It's dead. You can't comment on it anymore.
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 03:17 |
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I'm down for an IT book thread and will add it to the OP of the "A ticket came in' thread too!
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 03:33 |
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If anyone has any decent NSX reads, this guy could use them.
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 05:31 |
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Aunt Beth posted:If anyone has any decent NSX reads, this guy could use them. It's a poo poo show that's getting much, much worse. Nsx-V is the vsphere flavor that is most commonly used. It's end of life is supposedly 2021, two years from now. The replacement is nsx-T, independent from vcenter to provide better integration with other network stacks. NSX-T is not anywhere near completion and no orgs are using it in prod environments yet. VMware does not support SRM over nsx-T networks which is a pretty big loving deal. So NSX is going to be in this ridiculous position of attempting to end support on an ok-at-best product and forcing everybody to an unproven beta version in the span of a year. VMware seems to hate it. I highly recommend your team working with NSX jump into powershell dev from day one. Make custom tools that do everything you need for daily NSX operation and never touch the GUI.
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 06:23 |
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vShield Endpoint or whatever it was called was great. Years without any problems. NSX equivalent since we upgraded to 6.5 has been a huge pain in the rear end. It's a such a basic concept that I can't imagine the more complex pieces are any better. I want guest introspection. That's it. Apparently it's impossible to do right.
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 06:27 |
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Judge Schnoopy posted:I highly recommend your team working with NSX jump into powershell dev from day one. Make custom tools that do everything you need for daily NSX operation and never touch the GUI.
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 06:34 |
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Dr. Arbitrary posted:It's dead. You can't comment on it anymore. Ah my bad. On mobile and I don’t see any indication in the awful app that it’s locked or archived or whatever. New thread it is.
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 14:33 |
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Aunt Beth posted:As someone who hates the NSX GUI and is also my group’s resident powershell cheerleader, this is great advice and I will probably start doing just this. We have a fairly massive powershell library around DFW, which is what we primary use NSX for. From monitoring that NSX channel health is good across every host (VMware is really bad at telling you this), to deploying entire sections from a template using the API. If you need any ideas or pointers let me know, it's basically all I've been doing for the past 8 months straight.
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 15:14 |
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Okay folks, what is the hot poo poo in today’s server monitoring market? Is still the same shitshow it has always been? I need to monitor uptime on windows/Linux boxes as well as monitoring random processes, services, with history. We currently use solarwinds for some stuff and managed engine for others and I am looking to consolidate. And since 2019 is a brand new year we have discovered a brand new poo poo sandwich that I hope leads to more firings of what I hope is leaders this time. In one of our dev groups we have one dedicated to automation for reporting. Specifically automation for our customer systems. This “automation” turns out is nothing but access databases and macros which are run by manually logged on rdp sessions. This wasn’t discovered until rdp sessions settings were standardized to have time limits for inactivity.
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 15:32 |
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Sickening posted:Okay folks, what is the hot poo poo in today’s server monitoring market? Is still the same shitshow it has always been? I need to monitor uptime on windows/Linux boxes as well as monitoring random processes, services, with history. We currently use solarwinds for some stuff and managed engine for others and I am looking to consolidate. Soon enough you'll have everyone fired at your brand spanking new company. Everyone will know you as the "Count Sickening the Impaler". Good luck.
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 15:38 |
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Sickening posted:Okay folks, what is the hot poo poo in today’s server monitoring market? Is still the same shitshow it has always been? I need to monitor uptime on windows/Linux boxes as well as monitoring random processes, services, with history. We currently use solarwinds for some stuff and managed engine for others and I am looking to consolidate. I don't have an answer but I love the stories of your new place where you going around decapitating people
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 15:45 |
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We use PRTG with like 2500 sensors, it works well and is easy to get going.
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 15:51 |
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Sickening posted:In one of our dev groups we have one dedicated to automation for reporting. Specifically automation for our customer systems. This “automation” turns out is nothing but access databases and macros which are run by manually logged on rdp sessions. This wasn’t discovered until rdp sessions settings were standardized to have time limits for inactivity. So the automated reporting is just a guy who does them manually and calls it automated? gently caress's sake.
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 15:55 |
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Proteus Jones posted:So the automated reporting is just a guy who does them manually and calls it automated? gently caress's sake. He's done it so many times he just zones out and next thing he knows it's done. Sounds automated to me.
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 15:57 |
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Out of everything I've used, still like PRTG the best. Did a relatively large deployment of it at the MSP I worked at last and we had a couple hundred remote probes and probably somewhere around 7k sensors. Did well.
Internet Explorer fucked around with this message at 16:09 on Jan 4, 2019 |
# ? Jan 4, 2019 15:59 |
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we have PRTG and like 19,000 sensors, it runs like a dog and nobody will put money into giving it more resources i wish we could go back to nagios
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 16:00 |
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Proteus Jones posted:So the automated reporting is just a guy who does them manually and calls it automated? gently caress's sake. It’s loving insane. It’s this home brewed app that runs macros against Microsoft access. Of course the app can’t run as a service. I would love to send you guys the GUI for the loving thing because it’s glorious but there would be too much to blackout.
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 16:02 |
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alg posted:we have PRTG and like 19,000 sensors, it runs like a dog and nobody will put money into giving it more resources How many PRTG core servers do you have? What kind of hardware is backing it? Do you have a lot of expensive sensors that poll frequently?
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 16:02 |
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I don't use servers anymore, I exist entirely in the cloud
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 16:03 |
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CLAM DOWN posted:I don't use servers anymore, I exist entirely in the butt Yes, I am a child.
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 16:04 |
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I dislike nagios/prtg. I’ve used sensu in the past and I really liked it. And it’s a drop in replacement for nagios. But this is one of those areas where I look at it and decide it’s cheaper then the equivalent amount of FTE manpower and that it’s just simpler to dump into a SaaS vendors lap. Edit: But to be honest I am mostly in kubernetes and in AWS/GCP and get basic node level stats for free and instrument individual services into Prometheus. I use grafana on top to do the visualizations. freeasinbeer fucked around with this message at 16:07 on Jan 4, 2019 |
# ? Jan 4, 2019 16:05 |
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Grafana + [Graphite, Elasticsearch, InfluxDB, OpenTSDB] + Telegraf
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 16:08 |
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Sickening posted:Okay folks, what is the hot poo poo in today’s server monitoring market? Is still the same shitshow it has always been? I need to monitor uptime on windows/Linux boxes as well as monitoring random processes, services, with history. We currently use solarwinds for some stuff and managed engine for others and I am looking to consolidate. Oh come on Solarwinds N-Able/N-Central isn't that bad, they just gently caress things up every release and have some of the weirdest loving logic you can imagine; also anything outside of standard monitoring (WMI/SNMP/ICMP) is a dumpster fire of epic proportions. no, I'm not jaded and spiteful at all, why do you ask?
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 16:09 |
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Internet Explorer posted:How many PRTG core servers do you have? What kind of hardware is backing it? Do you have a lot of expensive sensors that poll frequently? we have one core server on a windows VM, lol I've gone through and tried to set all sensors to 5 minute polling at the most, but the network team insists on about 9000 sensors that poll every minute people have added lots and lots of collectors, or whatever they are called, but they don't really help. and some of the updates PRTG has made in the last year or two have made the UI extremely bad. they bought the tool for the network team, we really should just let them use it and roll our own solution, but: 1. we have a very inexperienced security team who calls open source "freeware" and refuses to allow us to use any open source software (85% of our infrastructure is on Red Hat lmao) 2. operations is barely able to handle the instructions we give them right now with PRTG, having two different monitoring solutions e-mailing them would be a nightmare
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 16:09 |
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# ? May 25, 2024 13:34 |
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alg posted:i wish we could go back to nagios This may be the first time I've ever seen this sentiment Really, the takeaway is that all monitoring remains terrible in TYOOL 2019, and it will always be thus.
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# ? Jan 4, 2019 16:10 |