review copies sent out, NFA a best-seller

I’m back from Toronto.  Now that I’m caught up on deleting spam, I’ve been able to get to the post office.  All of the free review books are now in the hands of the post office.

As I write this, somehow Network Flow Analysis is Amazon’s #4 best-seller in the category “Production, Operation, and Management.”  Amazon’s classification algorithms appear to be smoking some good stuff, but hey, it’s a best-seller list, so I’ll take it.

Can’t give the danged books away…

I’ve gone through the comments on my offer to give away review copies of my new book, and to my surprise found that several people I’d like to give books won’t be getting them… because I can’t contact them.

Leaving a comment that presents you as an intelligent, capable reviewer is great.  I appreciate that.  But if I can’t contact you, if I can’t write you and ask for your address, then I can’t send you a book.  Some people left Web addresses.  Fine, I can look there and get your contact information… if it’s on the page, or if you have a contact form, or something.  A few people have nice blogs, but no apparent contact form.  If your blog is not in English, and didn’t have something that looked like a contact or an email address, I looked at the front page source code to find a mailto: link.  That worked in some cases.

I’ve emailed people I can email, to get their snail mail addresses, so I can ship the review copies I have.  If you posted a thoughtful, insightful comment, but didn’t leave me a way to contact you… sorry.  Books will be shipped out next Tuesday or Wednesday, after my Toronto trip.  And if you ever get to Toronto, check out Mysteriously Yours.

Books have arrived!

The UPS delivery man rings our doorbell every time he drops off a package… unless it contains books. That means I only know my new books arrive when I trip over the box.

The first copy of NFA
You can still smell the fresh ink...

I’m pleased to report that, in addition to the useful technical content, this books contains 30% more insolence than my previous work.

I’ll be giving away several copies for reviews. If you’re interested, I’ve posted details here.

Cisco virtual bridge interfaces

Use a Bridge Virtual Interface when you want to have multiple router interfaces act as members of a single Ethernet collision domain, or bridge two separate network segments together.  Lots of wireless bridges use this function to attach their wireless clients to a local Ethernet.  Start by defining the bridge group:

router(config)#bridge 202 protocol ieee
router(config)#bridge 202 route ip

Then put some interfaces into that group:

router(config)#int faste31
router(config-if)#bridge-group 202
router(config-if)#int faste32
router(config-if)#bridge-group 202
router(config-if)#int faste33

Then, create the BVI interface:

router(config-if)#int bvi202
router(config-if)#desc new server cluster
router(config-if)#ip addr 198.22.62.65 255.255.255.240

Your BVI interface should be up, and all these formerly “router” ports should now be a transparent bridge.

(Why am I using BVI instead of VLAN on a bunch of Ethernet ports?  This particular switch is configured as a router, and it really wants to treat all the interfaces as router interfaces.  It insists it doesn’t know how to configure a VLAN.  I’m certain that Cisco has a reason for this, but their explanation might put me off my feed.)

Request Tracker serialized workflow

RT offers many ways to manage workflow, but most of them create a separate ticket for each part of the workflow.  The tasks at my company are mostly serialized:  a request comes in, is worked on by person A, who hands it off to person B, who hands it to person C, who closes the request.  Opening a separate ticket for each of these isn’t efficient.  (The situation is different for parallelized tasks.)  I want a method to easily pass tickets from one person to the next. Continue reading “Request Tracker serialized workflow”

apache22 LDAP auth

If you have a central auth directory, such as OpenLDAP, everything should authenticate against it, including your Web apps. Here’s how you set up a FreeBSD system to authenticate against your OpenLDAP directory. I did this on FreeBSD/i386 running 8.1-PRERELEASE, with Apache 2.2 and OpenLDAP 2.4. Before starting, make sure your OpenLDAP install is configured correctly. You should be able to successfully run ldapsearch(1) against your directory. If your base OpenLDAP install is busted, go no further. Continue reading “apache22 LDAP auth”

New fiction sale

My story “Wednesday’s Seagulls” just sold to http://short-story.me/. Unlike my previous fiction sales, this is to a Web site. Everyone will be able to view it, for as long as the site keeps it up.

I’ll announce when the story is actually posted there.