what did you learn today? (part 2)

Dzov

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That looking into a folder path length issue I found several hundred folders that look as if someone wrote a novel in the file name/path.
I only ever notice such things when my backups fail because of them. One time, I had some sort of recursively linked folder that was infinite. No idea how that happened, and I think I had to delete it via a linux boot cd.
 

moosemaimer

Ars Scholae Palatinae
817
I had someone complaining that when they tried to save changes to a file they'd created, it was telling them they didn't have permission. I eventually traced it down to a bug in LibreOffice (dating back to OpenOffice) where if you had a '#' in the path, on a Samba share, you could create but not edit files.
 
I had someone complaining that when they tried to save changes to a file they'd created, it was telling them they didn't have permission. I eventually traced it down to a bug in LibreOffice (dating back to OpenOffice) where if you had a '#' in the path, on a Samba share, you could create but not edit files.
Wow, nice troubleshooting. Ye gods that would be difficult to track down.

Was it intended as a feature of some kind?
 

sryan2k1

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More votes for the never cisco camp. Is there even a way to turn it off? All network gear I've ever seen says just yank power to turn them off.

Palo Alto has the extra shoot yourself in the foot option of powering off the management plane and the only way to get the box to restart is physically powercycle it. It warns you of this but I'm not sure why it's even an option.
 

SandyTech

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More votes for the never cisco camp. Is there even a way to turn it off? All network gear I've ever seen says just yank power to turn them off.
FWIW with our Juniper gear we were taught to use request system power-off or request system halt to gracefully power down.
 
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sryan2k1

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They're two sides of the same coin, horrible in their own ways but man They're cheap.

Too many people treat them as the best thing since sliced bread.


We tried out some CCR2004s, ran into a ton of actual issues on top of the annoyances with their ecosystem and was basically told by the community that I should have known better than to get a product that wasn't a few years old and crazy shit like "you made too many configuration changes and the flash is corrupt but you can't see that, so you need to net install it to reset the flash partitions"

Yeah no thanks, they were replaced with a pair of Arista 7280R3's. How many times do you think those have not saved a config properly after a write mem?


(Yes I understand comparing a CCR to a 7280 is like comparing a Fiat 500 to a Taycan)
 
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CPX

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Odd, those are usually fairly resilient since anything important is kept in battery/supercap backed caches.

Netapp's own site won't let me see the fucking KB article telling me how to restart the applications without an account and their account registration apparently takes a day to kick in. Fucked up thing is that I've had a Netapp account before but we changed email back in 2021 so new account it is.

Put the controllers in loader prompt and disabled autoboot to charge those batteries juuuuust in case.
 

Demento

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I was wondering, "why .123 for NTP?", and then I remembered the port number.

Still probably wouldn't put a server there, my reflex is to keep those low and high to make room for a nice big DHCP block in the middle. (edit: well, servers low, network gear high, to be more precise.)
For context, 123 was also the number for the talking clock in the UK.