On 7/21/2015 8:43 AM, Jared Mauch wrote:
DNS is still largely UDP. Water is also still wet :) - but you may not be doing 10% of your
On Tue, Jul 21, 2015 at 08:09:56AM -0400, Curtis Maurand wrote: links as UDP/53.
DNS can also use TCP as well, including sending more than one query in a pipelined fashion.
The challenge that Cameron is trying to document here is when seeing large volumes of UDP it becomes necessary to do something to keep the network up. This response is frustrating for those of us who prefer to have a unfiltered e2e network but maintaining the network as up in the face of these adverse conditions is important.
- Jared Point well taken.
-Curtis
--Curtis
On 7/20/2015 5:40 PM, Ca By wrote:
Folks, it may be time to take the next step and admit that UDP is too broken to support
https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-byrne-opsec-udp-advisory-00
Your comments have been requested
On Mon, Jul 20, 2015 at 8:57 AM, Drew Weaver <drew.weaver@thenap.com> wrote:
Has anyone else seen a massive amount of illegitimate UDP 1720 traffic coming from China being sent towards IP addresses which provide VoIP services?
I'm talking in the 20-30Gbps range?
The first incident was yesterday at around 13:00 EST, the second incident was today at 09:00 EST.
I'm assuming this is just another DDoS like all others, but I would be interested to hear if I am not the only one seeing this.
On list or off-list is fine.
Thanks, -Drew
-- Best Regards Curtis Maurand Principal Xyonet Web Hosting mailto:cmaurand@xyonet.com http://www.xyonet.com
-- Best Regards Curtis Maurand Principal Xyonet Web Hosting mailto:cmaurand@xyonet.com http://www.xyonet.com