Displaying 7 results from an estimated 7 matches for "e59".
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2005 Aug 04
3
Ocfs and EMC Powerpath
A couple years ago, we moved to Oracle RAC on Linux using ocfs that is
SAN attached to an EMC CLARiiON. At the time, there was a reason that we
did NOT use EMC's Powerpath (I just can't recall what that reason was).
What I'd like to know is if there are any issues with introducing
Powerpath now.
* RHEL 2.1 AS
* 2.4.9-e.38enterprise
* ocfs-2.4.9-e-enterprise-1.0.13-1
* EMC
2003 Apr 13
2
Problem in getting tftp transfer to succeed
...0 2041 626f 7274 6564 0000 c595 TFTP.Aborted....
0x0030 e0e5 ..
10:42:50.343263 192.168.1.10.2071 > 192.168.1.1.tftp: 22 RRQ ""
0x0000 4500 0032 0004 0000 1411 235c c0a8 010a E..2......#\....
0x0010 c0a8 0101 0817 0045 001e e59e 0001 006f .......E.......o
0x0020 6374 6574 0062 6c6b 7369 7a65 0031 3435 ctet.blksize.145
0x0030 3600 375d 80b8 6.7]..
10:42:50.344614 192.168.1.1.49235 > 192.168.1.10.2071: udp 17
0x0000 4500 002d 4071 0000 4011 b6f3 c0a8 0101 E..- at...
2005 Aug 04
0
[Fwd: Re: Ocfs and EMC Powerpath]
...path with CX300's and Emulex HBA's, also with OCFS on
Red Hat 2.1 AS.
Kernel upgrades are the biggest issue that we have, as some of the
drivers are dependent on modules built for specific kernels, and if your
not careful you can have boot issues with them.
I would suggest at least kernel e59 and OCFS v1.0.14.
Powerpath may only be supported to v3.7 on that 2.1 platfrom, but I
would doublecheck that with EMC support matrix.
We had issues with iostat statistics as well, but they seem to be better
with the latest systat packages, so make sure you update that as well.
Other than that, t...
2013 Aug 28
2
[LLVMdev] Adding diversity for security (and testing)
...lasses of attackers you have in mind?
Of course, AES is _really_ fast [4] and in general, for a security application, I can't think of a good reason not to use a CSPRNG when random numbers are warranted.
1. http://users.ece.cmu.edu/~ejschwar/papers/usenix11.pdf
2. http://www.reteam.org/papers/e59.pdf
3. http://www.isg.rhul.ac.uk/tls/TLStiming.pdf
4. http://cr.yp.to/aes-speed/aesspeed-20080926.pdf
--
Stephen Checkoway
2011 May 16
0
SEM Model Not Converging
...NA
reP3DRD<->reP3DRD, e51, NA
reP3Equip<->reP3Equip, e52, NA
reP3UC<->reP3UC, e53, NA
reP3SP<->reP3SP, e54, NA
reP3UM<->reP3UM, e55, NA
reP3Abuse<->reP3Abuse, e56, NA
reP3SB<->reP3SB, e57, NA
reP3helmet<->reP3helmet, e58, NA
reP1DADR<->reP1DADR, e59, NA
reP1DRUG<->reP1DRUG, e60, NA
reP1SP<->reP1SP, e61, NA
reinjwhileDU<->reinjwhileDU, e62, NA
reinjwhileWDUDRV<->reinjwhileWDUDRV, e63, NA
reinjwhileDA<->reinjwhileDA, e64, NA
reinjwhileDRafterD<->reinjwhileDRafterD, e65, NA
reinjwhileUcrack<->reinjwhileUc...
2013 Aug 28
0
[LLVMdev] Adding diversity for security (and testing)
On Mon, Aug 26, 2013 at 9:14 PM, Todd Jackson <quantum.skyline at gmail.com>wrote:
>
> > We would also include a secure random number generator which links
>> > against OpenSSL. This would of course be an optional module disabled
>> > by default, but is necessary so the randomization is cryptographically
>> > secure and useful in security applications.
2013 Aug 27
4
[LLVMdev] Adding diversity for security (and testing)
> > We would also include a secure random number generator which links
> > against OpenSSL. This would of course be an optional module disabled
> > by default, but is necessary so the randomization is cryptographically
> > secure and useful in security applications.
>
> I am not sure why you need this feature. You can provide LLVM with a
> SEED value that can be