19%
30.07.2014
00:00:00 Thursday January 1, 1970, Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).
Listing 1: Perl Example Client
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use IO::Socket;
use Sys::CpuLoad;
my
19%
11.06.2014
image, and then Volatility [3] and Mandiant Redline [4] for further investigation. In this paper, I dive more deeply into Redline and Volatility.
To begin, I review a raw memory dump of a known malware
19%
27.08.2014
files in ext3/ext4 filesystems
Zipf theta - Estimate of Zipfian distribution theta
Ioprof is written in Perl and is fairly easy to run, but it has to be run as root (or with root privileges
19%
27.09.2021
Request timeout for icmp_seq 0
Request timeout for icmp_seq 1
Request timeout for icmp_seq 2
64 bytes from 52.90.56.122: icmp_seq=3 ttl=48
time=40.492 ms
[ output truncated ]
Welcome to Ubuntu 20.04.1 LTS
19%
29.09.2020
released as open source, having been a tool "that was used internally for a long time now" [3]. To demonstrate StatusBay in action, the tech stack will include a miniscule Kubernetes distribution, K3s [4
19%
27.09.2021
/.acme.sh/www.example.com/www.example.com.cer -noout -issuer -subject -dates -serial
issuer= /C=US/O=Let's Encrypt/CN=R3
subject= /CN=www.example.com
notBefore=Feb 21 13:00:28 2021 GMT
notAfter=May 22 13:00:28 2021 GMT
serial=03B46ADF0F26B94C19443669
19%
03.12.2015
.0/24 !10.0.3.0/24
root@ubuntu:~# ps -eaf | grep dnsmas
lxc-dns+ 1047 1 0 18:24 ? 00:00:00 dnsmasq -u lxc-dnsmasq --strict-order --bind-interfaces --pid-file=/run/lxc/dnsmasq.pid --conf
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13.12.2018
disk reads: 1306 MB in 3.00 seconds = 434.77 MB/sec
federico@cybertron:~$ sudo hdparm -W /dev/sdb
/dev/sdb:
write-caching = 1 (on)
federico@cybertron:~$ sudo hdparm -W 0 /dev/sdb
/dev/sdb:
write
19%
25.11.2012
crash /proc/iomem
03000000-0affffff : Crash kernel
[root@rhel ~]# grep crash /proc/cmdline
ro root=/dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol00 rd_NO_LUKS KEYBOARDTYPE=pc \
KEYTABLE=de-latin1-nodeadkeys rd
19%
17.04.2017
to occur every night of the week at 3:00am. This involved backing up an entire Ubuntu installation in a bootable image on network-attached storage (NAS) in the local network (Figure 3). When backing up