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Cake day: June 16th, 2023

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  • non_burglar@lemmy.worldtoSelfhosted@lemmy.worldRevisiting Rule #3
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    9 hours ago

    As others have mentioned here, there is a lot of natural overlap with vps renting, hardware re-use, gerenal approaches to managing infrastructure, docker, and Linux in general. I don’t even mind networking questions here.

    When questions stray in that aren’t really that relevant, like beginner Linux questions, someone is generally nice enough to point to a more appropriate community.

    What I think wastes time in this community are the gatekeeping topics like “your vps isnt self-hosting”.




  • Wow, you diagnosed buffer bloat and applied the fix to your LAN side? Sooo much work…

    The problem is unlikely to have been on the proxmox side. Multiqueue only allows virtio to multithread TCP connections via the host CPU using more than one virtual cpu, but this is essentially like aggregating a network link; it will increase bandwidth, but not throughput. Besides, the actual limit for the proxmox internal bridge and virtio NICs is “whatever the cpu can manage”, which is sometimes over 10Gb. It’s unlikely to be slowing down traffic coming from your vms.






  • You are trying to de-jargon topics, and that’s fine, but the two following categories do not help, they are localized habits and don’t have any value to non-english or nontechnical people, or both:

    • shortenings: a11y for accessibility is not a common contraction, it’s not helpful for anyone to understand the term itself
    • names of services: CF for cloudflare is not something worth defining. Names change, and you wouldn’t see this in a professional document. It’s like defining “lol”, the acronym is shorthand in typed communication, not technical jargon.

    Side note, DNS stands for domain name system, it has never meant domain name service.

    I personally find bots annoying, half the content on the internet is already bots.







  • The author says that Linux should be as usable for grandparents as it is for children

    My problem with this statement constantly bombarded on us is that it assumes that someone somewhere out there who cares.

    To me, it seems that is the actual deciding factor in sticking with Linux… Realizing that if you want something that doesn’t exist, you’ll have to make it.


  • Oh, yeah, absolutely. Suricata was created not long after snort, in the days when an ids did the gathering and the correlation.

    You’re totally right, the way most people and orgs do it today is to ship ids logs to a siem for the correlation, overall easier to manage. ELK is the go-to for most, not sure about wazuh, I’ve only seen it in the homelab space, but it might work.

    There is a distro (not totally open source) called SELKS, which sets up suricata, elastic and some other tooling (kibana) in a commonly-used setup. I deploy it a lot because it saves time with the non-security setup with dB’s and such. Pretty easy to point syslog to it and you can see alerts right away and start tuning.

    I’m envious of your position, I learned a lot setting this stuff up.


  • The mirrored traffic will retain their VLAN tags and Suricata can parse these tags.

    I’m not sure how far down this path you’ve gone, but suricata will not automatically correlate primitives into actual alerts from different vlans without transforms, which are cpu-intensive for what they do.

    You may want to pull your tap/span/mirror from a point where they converge, like internal side of network egress.