Latest Server related questions

Score: 1
BIND - list of forwarders used on several zones
ye flag

I am setting up a BIND (v9.16) nameserver.

Its main purpose is to work as a regular recursor for our internal hosts. For a couple of specific zones though (the ones that we host), I need to set it up as a forwarder. The goal is to avoid creating a dependency on root and TLD DNS servers, and being able to continue using our internal services even in the case of unavailability of our outside networ ...

Score: 0
Omid Shojaee avatar
HTTP redirect partially works
in flag

We have two applications behind our router listening on port 80/443. The router has just one valid IP address. The first application is a mail server and the second one is our source control server.

In this case one solution is to set each application to listen on a different port. This is not desirable for us.

So we have one Windows/IIS server receiving all Internet traffic to act as some sort of p ...

Score: 0
query_question avatar
Docker accessible via localhost:8080 & 127.0.0.1:8080 but not via IP
cn flag

I have the below scenario - 3x Vagrant VMs are spinned from the below Vagrantfile, up and running (visible within Oracle VirtualBox).

I am logged on docker1, the network type is "NAT", portforwarding is used (Guest:8080, Host:8080).

I am able to access the page from localhost:8080 & 127.0.0.1:8080 & 127.0.1.1:8080. However, I have no access via the IP (192.168.99.101:8080 is "Taking too long ...

Score: 0
Docker Redsocks as proxy for all traffic
ru flag

I'm using redsocks to connect to my socks5 proxy and everything works fine but because docker creates an new interface named docker0 no traffic gets forwarded to REDSOCKS

Standart Redsocks config

iptables -t nat -N REDSOCKS
iptables -t nat -A REDSOCKS -d 0.0.0.0/8 -j RETURN
iptables -t nat -A REDSOCKS -d 10.0.0.0/8 -j RETURN
iptables -t nat -A REDSOCKS -d 127.0.0.0/8 -j RETURN
iptables -t nat -A REDSO ...
Score: 0
Excellent Exim House avatar
Redirect all pages to non www and one page to www
cn flag

I want to redirect all my internal pages (eg: example.com/about) to their non-www version but I want my homepage (https://example.com) to redirect to its www version (https://www.example.com).

I searched many articles on the internet but it could not work.

If set both rules then the internal pages get redirected fine but the homepage gets trapped in a loop.

I don't know how to code so please it's a requ ...

Score: 0
0diseuz avatar
AWS ALB - health check to port 3306 (DB)?
cn flag

I have a ALB with it's target group, the HTTP health checks are running fine. I would like to do the same to port 3306 (because we have been dealing with some issues with our DB), and maybe add to this new health check a SNS to notify us when it crashes.

Is there a way to do it with the feature of adding the SNS notification? Lambda, another target group?

Score: 0
Roger avatar
How to block non vlan traffic for an ip address on linux
in flag

I have a vlan created on a Linux vm and assigned ip address to it.I would like to block all incoming traffic to the IP address that is not coming from the same vlan I would still like to able to send traffic to similar ips that are in different hosts but on same vlan How is that possible ? Any configuration that can be done

Score: 0
Sion C avatar
Prevent FING / network scan on router level
kr flag

I connect 20+ phones on the same wifi.

I use each with a different VPN connection (android)

I see a network scan can leak when pining the whole subnet.

Is there a router settings to avoid discovery on LAN ?

Can I connect a second router with different subnet to the main router and block only this subnet while sharing the internet from main router?

Score: -1
Francisco avatar
Can't start Mercure Hub on Debian 11 with supervisord, outh of Docker image
ca flag

I'm trying to exec Mercure hub from supervisor, but is not possible for me. Mercure is in the same machine of webserver with the SSL virtualhost for pami54.local domain.

[program:mercure]
environment=JWT_KEY="m3rcu353cr37pa55pra53DEV"; CORS_ALLOWED_ORIGINS="https://pami54.local"; PUBLISH_ALLOWED_ORIGINS="*"; ADDR="pami54.local:3000"
command=/home/frizquierdo/mercureLinux/mercure run -config /home/frizquie ...

The Stunning Power of Questions

Much of an executive’s workday is spent asking others for information—requesting status updates from a team leader, for example, or questioning a counterpart in a tense negotiation. Yet unlike professionals such as litigators, journalists, and doctors, who are taught how to ask questions as an essential part of their training, few executives think of questioning as a skill that can be honed—or consider how their own answers to questions could make conversations more productive.

That’s a missed opportunity. Questioning is a uniquely powerful tool for unlocking value in organizations: It spurs learning and the exchange of ideas, it fuels innovation and performance improvement, it builds rapport and trust among team members. And it can mitigate business risk by uncovering unforeseen pitfalls and hazards.

For some people, questioning comes easily. Their natural inquisitiveness, emotional intelligence, and ability to read people put the ideal question on the tip of their tongue. But most of us don’t ask enough questions, nor do we pose our inquiries in an optimal way.

The good news is that by asking questions, we naturally improve our emotional intelligence, which in turn makes us better questioners—a virtuous cycle. In this article, we draw on insights from behavioral science research to explore how the way we frame questions and choose to answer our counterparts can influence the outcome of conversations. We offer guidance for choosing the best type, tone, sequence, and framing of questions and for deciding what and how much information to share to reap the most benefit from our interactions, not just for ourselves but for our organizations.