Bookmarks for 16 Mar 2016 through 24 Mar 2016

These are my links for 16 Mar 2016 through 24 Mar 2016:

  • “Reverse Engineering for Beginners” free book
  • Resolve Hardware Status Alert SEL_FULLNESS | Brian Ragazzi – […] I noticed an alert on two UCS B250M2 hosts in the vSphere Client. The alert Name was “Status of other host hardware objects”. This isn’t helpful. To get more information, you have to navigate to the Hardware Status tab of the host properties. Here I saw more information about the alert. It’s cryptically named “System Board 0 SEL_FULLNESS”. […]
  • Network Stack: Cisco ASA Packet Capture – […] The ASA platform has fantastic built-in packet capture capabilities which can come in very handy for troubleshooting issues. I will be demonstrating some of the capabilities using an ASA 5505 running version 9.0(1).Performing a packet capture is done using the capture command from privileged exec mode. […][ Fantastic… I won’t say that ]
  • Sanesecurity ClamAV Malware, Phishing, and Spam Signatures – Sanesecurity produces add-ons signatures to help improve the ClamAV detection rate on Zero-Day malware and even on Zero-Hour malware. Since 2006 we have provided professional quality ClamAV signatures to protect against the following email types: Macro malware, Zip malware, Rar malware, Javascript malware, 7z malware, Phishing, Spear phishing and other types of common emailed malware and spam. Sanesecurity 3rd Party ClamAV signatures can also help prevent TeslaCrypt, Cryptowall, Cryptolocker and other ransomware, who’s source usually starts as a malicious email.
  • Multistage environments with Ansible – Ross Tuck – Ansible has excellent documentation but one thing I was confused about was the best way to store the configuration for multistage projects: say, different passwords for dev, staging, production. This isn’t really covered in the ansible-examples repo because it’s specific to your project and while the documentation has recommendations, it doesn’t spell it out completely (which I need since I’m an idiot).

Bookmarks for 10 mag 2011 through 12 mag 2011

These are my links for 10 mag 2011 through 12 mag 2011:

  • ostinato – Packet/Traffic Generator and Analyzer – Google Project Hosting – Ostinato is an open-source, cross-platform network packet crafter/traffic generator and analyzer with a friendly GUI. Craft and send packets of several streams with different protocols at different rates. For the full feature list see below.<br />
    Ostinato aims to be "Wireshark in Reverse" and become complementary to Wireshark.
  • BashPitfalls – Greg’s Wiki – This page shows common errors that Bash programmers make.
  • Wiki structure for AIX documentation – Summary:  This article provides a structure, configuration, and methodology for building and maintaining an automated wiki server for your AIX technical documentation. One of the most difficult tasks associated with system administration is maintaining a centralized documentation repository and enforcing standards for documentation in the repository. The wiki environment helps to create a standardized look-and-feel for your documentation repository and provides an easy to maintain environment for all contributors to the repository.

Bookmarks for 3 mar 2011 through 9 mar 2011

These are my links for 3 mar 2011 through 9 mar 2011:

  • Viewer for Microsoft Project files – MOOS Project Viewer is a viewer for Microsoft® Project that allows you to open, view in a dynamic way and print any Microsoft® Project file. It is running on any Java enabled platform including Windows®, Mac OS X and Linux. There are many viewers for Microsoft® Project on the market, some freeware and others commercial. MOOS Project Viewer is the best viewer choice for Microsoft® Project in terms of features/price. But do not take our words for it. Test it for yourself!
  • Welcome to The TCP/IP Guide! – The TCP/IP Guide is a reference resource on the TCP/IP protocol suite that was designed to be not only comprehensive, but comprehensible. Organized using a logical, hierarchical structure, The TCP/IP Guide uses a personal, easy-going writing style that lets anyone understand the technologies that run the Internet. The Guide explains dozens of protocols and technologies in over 1,500 pages. It includes full coverage of PPP, ARP, IP, IPv6, IP NAT, IPSec, Mobile IP, ICMP, RIP, BGP, TCP, UDP, DNS, DHCP, SNMP, FTP, SMTP, NNTP, HTTP, Telnet and much more.
  • traffic shaping con linux – Per la serie belli e utili, il post di Spippolazione:<br />
    […]per esempio, su un proxy squid con indirizzo ip 192.168.1.1 limitare a 3 mega in up ed in down la banda. Provare per credere[…]

Bookmarks for 10 ago 2010 through 20 set 2010

These are my links for 10 ago 2010 through 20 set 2010:

  • The Lighter Side of the System Administration – Una raccolta, non troppo aggiornata, di umorismo informatico, geekerie, etc
  • Il Wireshark dei poveri – […] Non avendo la minima voglia di installare Wireshark su un server così importante, mi sono deciso ad usare netstat. Dopo un po’ di tentativi ho usato la seguente sintassi […]<br />
    <br />
    bello Beggiuccio mio
  • Mappare stampanti di rete con VBScript – Problematica semplice: una stampante di rete nuova, diversi PC che devono poterla utilizzare, non c’è kix che può aiutarmi ma c’è Active Directory con il suo Netlogon sempre valido. Dato che spiegare agli utenti come mapparsi una stampante potrebbe diventare una delle missioni più difficili di questo mondo e data l’urgenza della cosa, un piccolo trucco in VBScript può venire in soccorso per mappare tutto ciò che desideriamo in pochissimi secondi.
  • Extract Registry values from offline Registry file with RegFileExport – RegFileExport is a new command-line utility for advanced users that allows you to easily extract keys and values from offline Registry file located on external hard-drive and export them into a standard .reg file of Windows. RegFileExport doesn't load the file into a Registry hive like RegEdit, instead, it directly reads the Registry file and analyzes it.<br />
    <br />
    RegFileExport may also be able to extract keys and values from the Registry file even if the Registry file is corrupted and cannot be loaded by Windows<br />
    <br />
    [via http://www.bufferoverflow.it/]
  • 500 Internal Server Error – 500 Internal Server Error

Bookmarks for 2 ago 2010 from 17:06 to 17:14

These are my links for 2 ago 2010 from 17:06 to 17:14:

  • LasCon Storage – TSM Scripting Hints and Tips – Send offsite and recall Copy tapes <br />
    Free up tapes which are almost empty <br />
    Multiple macro commands <br />
    Exporting scripts <br />
    Updating Netware Client Passwords
  • LasCon Storage – TSM Administration – Tivoli is part of IBM, and they provide a suite of management products for distributed systems. TSM used to be called ADSM and works on the 'incremental backup forever' principle, which takes a bit of getting used to, compared to the more traditional 'weekly full backup and daily incremental' system. With TSM, you backup all your clients to one central data backup server. This makes administration a lot easier, but means you have to limit the amount of data you send over the network. That's why TSM needs to be incremental. A central database records all backup information, and can be used to recreate a whole server if necessary. TSM always keeps at least one backup of every on-line file.
  • Shan’s "Fix IT in 1 Minute!" UNIX Admin Blog – Welcome to "Fix IT in 1 Minute!" – Shan Jing's UNIX Administration blog. It covers Solaris, Linux, AIX, Web; Unix/TCP/IP Internal Programming (C/Python/Perl); TCP/IP Protocols and Services (DNS, NIS, Kerberos, LDAP, SSH, Openssl, etc.); Shell scripting,Perl /Web XML/DBMS SQL; Security & Intrusion Detection (nmap,snort); Enterprise Web Middleware and Backend: WebLogic/Tomcat/Java/JSP/Web Applications; Grid Computing, Python/Django Web Framework, etc.

Bookmarks for 2 ago 2010 from 17:06 to 17:14

These are my links for 2 ago 2010 from 17:06 to 17:14:

  • LasCon Storage – TSM Scripting Hints and Tips – Send offsite and recall Copy tapes <br />
    Free up tapes which are almost empty <br />
    Multiple macro commands <br />
    Exporting scripts <br />
    Updating Netware Client Passwords
  • LasCon Storage – TSM Administration – Tivoli is part of IBM, and they provide a suite of management products for distributed systems. TSM used to be called ADSM and works on the 'incremental backup forever' principle, which takes a bit of getting used to, compared to the more traditional 'weekly full backup and daily incremental' system. With TSM, you backup all your clients to one central data backup server. This makes administration a lot easier, but means you have to limit the amount of data you send over the network. That's why TSM needs to be incremental. A central database records all backup information, and can be used to recreate a whole server if necessary. TSM always keeps at least one backup of every on-line file.
  • Shan’s "Fix IT in 1 Minute!" UNIX Admin Blog – Welcome to "Fix IT in 1 Minute!" – Shan Jing's UNIX Administration blog. It covers Solaris, Linux, AIX, Web; Unix/TCP/IP Internal Programming (C/Python/Perl); TCP/IP Protocols and Services (DNS, NIS, Kerberos, LDAP, SSH, Openssl, etc.); Shell scripting,Perl /Web XML/DBMS SQL; Security & Intrusion Detection (nmap,snort); Enterprise Web Middleware and Backend: WebLogic/Tomcat/Java/JSP/Web Applications; Grid Computing, Python/Django Web Framework, etc.

Bookmarks for 9 lug 2010 through 15 lug 2010

These are my links for 9 lug 2010 through 15 lug 2010:

  • Free online OCR
  • A Tcpdump Tutorial and Primer | danielmiessler.com – Tcpdump is the premier network analysis tool for information security professionals. Having a solid grasp of this über-powerful application is mandatory for anyone desiring a thorough understanding of TCP/IP. Many prefer to use higher level analysis tools such as (Ethereal) Wireshark, but I believe this to usually be a mistake.[…]
  • Gioco di Squadra & Intelligenza Collettiva – Il MIT Media Lab ha creato Mars Escape, gioco on line per due persone il cui obiettivo è contribuire all’educazione di Nexi.<br />
    <br />
    Obiettivo del gioco è quello di permettere al robot di assolvere a determinati compiti con l’ausilio dell’essere umano. Le strategie e le interazioni sviluppate dai partecipanti servono a fornire le informazioni necessarie al raggiungimento di questo obiettivo.<br />
    <br />
    In Mars Escape il giocatore può mantenere le sembianze umane personificando un astronauta o, al contrario, convertirsi in un robot; lo scenario, come suggerisce il nome, è una stazione spaziale su Marte.<br />
    <br />
    [via http://delicious.com/pecus ]

Bookmarks for 7 mag 2010 through 12 mag 2010

These are my links for 7 mag 2010 through 12 mag 2010:

  • AIX « I am vistababa!
  • How to get unrestricted root access to HMC? « I am vistababa! – Using GUI interface of HMC, you can’t do everything you like! You just can use predefined features of GUI. For example, you can’t schedule every commands you want, or you can’t run a command remotely on clients from HMC, and so on.
  • Get your Dell Service Tag number via the Linux (or Windows) command-line – Brandon Checketts – When your server is located in a data center far away, it makes it difficult to walk over to the box and read the service tag off of it. Fortunately, the Service Tag is stored somewhere in the system BIOS, and is accessible with the ‘dmidecode’ utility.
  • TCP Traffic Analyzer (Yahoo! Developer Network Blog) – You probably have questions like these about traffic on a TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) server (or client):<br />
    <br />
    * How many connections lasted more (or less) than X milliseconds?<br />
    * How many connections needed more than N attempts to succeed?<br />
    * What is the distribution of connection duration or connection throughput?<br />
    * What is the distribution of connection duration or throughput for connections in which the server or client sent more than N bytes?<br />
    * What specific IP addresses and ports had connections that lasted between 50 and 100 milliseconds long?<br />
    <br />
    You can get answers to these questions (and more) using Yahoo!'s TCP Traffic Analyzer (yconalyzer), available as an open-source project via free download.