Quote from: franco on Today at 01:25:52 PMTo some degree I understand the problem at handI think you are missing the point here.
Quote from: franco on Today at 01:25:52 PMbut I'm wondering why you find your manually configured static ARP entries suboptimal?Because, I don't want them "anymore". The configuration page for them is NOT accessible when ISC is disabled. I need to disable Dnsmasq for the given interface, to access this configuration again.
Quote from: franco on Today at 01:25:52 PMAre you still using ISC?No. That is the point.
Quote from: franco on Today at 01:25:52 PMDo you need these static entries?No. But after disabling ISC, it is not clear where they are coming from and how to remove those entries. UI elements are completely not available, even more so if you remove the ISC DHCP plugin completely.
Quote from: franco on Today at 01:25:52 PMYou could also remove the MAC address which would make them not feed into the Neighbor table.I know how to workaround the issue, but once ISC is disabled it is no longer possible, without reenabling it (at least temporary). It makes stale configuration, no longer accessible from user interface to affect the arp table.
Quote from: franco on Today at 08:54:08 AM/usr/local/etc/rc.sshd is a script from *sense. Don't trust AI. ;)Yeah, I was more pointing out that when you use something FreeBSD based a bit of additional basic FreeBSD knowledge is very nice to have! :)
QuoteIf you are into verbatim FreeBSD commands this should do the trick:NICE!
# service openssh onestart
QuoteBut keep in mind even then you'd have to go to /usr/local/etc/ssh/sshd_config and configure it according to your needs because OpenSSH doesn't permit password and root login by default as far as I remember (same as us really).AFAIK it's a default setting spread out to all Linux/*BSD distributions that use OpenSSH Server :)
Quote from: Seimus on Today at 10:36:54 AMHonestly I think you cant actually get 10G ~ wirerate.I think so too based on personal experience with Dedicated Hosting/Server Rental setups in the past :
QuoteFirewall Throughput - 10Gbps = BackPlane:)
Firewall Port to Port Throughput - 8.5Gbps = Throughput per single 10G NIC
Realistically speaking the MAX you should get is 8.5G, but that will heavily depend on your implementations.
Quote from: vpx on Today at 08:13:32 AMYes, they seemed to be identical to me. I didn't doubt.QuoteMaybe it is complaining about the remote site's id. Possibly it's different from the IP address?As you can see or can't see because I redacted the rest of the IP, the remote IP and remote ID are identical.