Categories
Networking

Change to H.ROOT-SERVERS.NET

Posted to NANOG
This is advance notice that there is a scheduled change to the IP addresses
for one of the authorities listed for the DNS root zone and the .ARPA TLD.
The change is to H.ROOT-SERVERS.NET, which is administered by the U.S. Army
Research Laboratory.

The new IPv4 address for this authority is 198.97.190.53.

The new IPv6 address for the authority is 2001:500:1::53.

This change is anticipated to be implemented in the root zone on 1 December
2015, however the new addresses are operational now. They will replace the
previous IP addresses of 128.63.2.53 and 2001:500:1::803f:235 (also
previously known as AOS.BRL.MIL and AOS.ARL.ARMY.MIL).

We encourage operators of DNS infrastructure to update any references to the
old IP addresses and replace them with the new addresses. In particular,
many DNS resolvers have a DNS root “hints” file. This should be updated with
the new IP addresses.

New hints files will be available at the following URLs once the change has
been formally executed on December 1:

http://www.internic.net/domain/named.root
http://www.internic.net/domain/named.cache

The old IPv4 address will continue to work for six months after the
transition (until 1 June 2016), at which point it will be retired from
service. The address will remain under the control of the Army Research
Laboratory, never to be used again for DNS service. The old IPv6 address
will continue to work indefinitely, but may ultimately be retired from
service.

Simultaneous to the retirement of the old address on June 1, 2016, the
ASN for H-root will change from 13 to 1508.

You can monitor the transition of queries to the new addresses at the
following URL:

http://h.root-servers.org/old_vs_new.html

Categories
Ham Radio

Journey into Ham Radio and DMR

For years I have hung out with “Hams” and been somewhat interested in the technology.  Guys like ka8jil, w9sn, w9smj, w9cjo, w9abh have all interested in me in ham radio. I remember many years ago, before cell signals were digital, being able to pull up to a car and watching my buddy Tom tune his radio in and listen on the cell conversation going on in the car next to us.  For educational purposes only of course.  It reminded me of the blue  and Red box days of telephone phreaking.  The days of the 300 baud modems and making init strings to make the best possible connection.  For me, and I think I am like many other folks, it wasn’t the draw to the hobby, but rather all of the moving pieces of it which kept me from taking the step into it.  Traditionally Hams have tuned and tuned their radio setups, with many building their own antennas.  I can see where tuning a “shack” to get the best you can get out of it can be a challenging and rewarding thing for many.  Picking the right hardline, connectors, and other pieces takes alot of research, and some trial and error to make it function cohesively.  Tracking down noise, little hums in your transmissions, and other things is a problem solving logic that can stimulate the brain.

repeater
Motorola DMR Repeater wb9arc

But, I am not a true hardware guy.  I am more of a wizard at making it do what I want within the bounds of the software.  If I can make an add on to interface with something existing then thats as far as my interest goes.  This is what we were doing “back in the day” with blue boxes then moving on to the commodore 64. Being able to bypass copy protection, spinning up hardware keys to bypass restrictions, and stretching the limits of what the software could do with hardware add ons.  Then along came the Internet and dial-up modem banks, ISDN, T1s, etc.  All these were technology which could be pushed with “add ons” and “hacks” to something existing.  This is where my attention is really stimulated.  To me, Ham Radio has always been about taking all these different pieces and trying to make something work.  Kind of like getting a total random box of Legos and having to make a replica of the USS Ronald Regan aircraft carrier.  Sure, you can do it, but it’s going to take alot of effort.  Oh and BTW, you have to make it float when you are done. I think there is a large group like me who just wish to put something together from a kit, and then customize from there.

IMG_1196
300 foot tower with ham antennas installed by the author

So now, fast-forward to 2015.  A technology called DMR is really taking off.  Several of my HAM friends are enlisting my help to bring these repeaters live on IP networks and putting them on towers.  After awhile it really clocks with me.  This is kind of like the days of the USR Total Control modem banks.  You have a piece of hardware that does radio to IP conversion along with a few other functions. It communicates with a server over the IP network and an antenna on a tower. DMR is a standard and has set guidelines on how it is supposed to function.  You aren’t inventing the wheel, but optimizing a setup within the bounds of what the repeater is supposed to do.  To me this is a big draw. You have a baseline of how it’s supposed to work, which takes much of the frustration away which can be a very demotivating factor in any endeavor.

10947293_10203860317650222_153078851919436001_n
Tower works on a WISP/Repeater tower

There are guys out there who are intrigued and love the RF side of stuff.  It is a science, but you can get so bogged down in it.  If you are making your own antennas you have to make sure all your wire lengths are just right, you use the correct solder, and all these 1000 other factors.  To me, that is not fun.  I admire these folks. It’s not that I want to put in the effort, I am missing the gene that experiences great joy in seeing an antenna I worked 2 months on finally go up in the air and kinda work.  I say kinda work, because I see time and time again having to adjust this or that or replacing this filter, or that connector.  To me that is frustrating. I like spending my time starting with a baseline setup and making that perform the best it can. Some say thats taking what someone else has already put together.  Heck yeah it is.  That is why I admire the tinkerer folks.  They give the folks like me a solid product i can go out and put to use because I didn’t spend those two months doing that piece of it.

IMG_0139
Tytera DMR radio

I know many folks are seeing DMR as the hot and sexy new technology.  I am looking at it as something that is able to be duplicated over and over with minor tweaks.  This keeps things interesting, without having to start from scratch each time.  Instead of focusing on soldering, and programming PLC boards, you can now focus on site installation, and tuning new and existing installations.   On the radio side you have the draw of programming radios to work with repeaters, and talk groups, and the like.  Repeaters have their own software to learn.  Again, you aren’t re-inventing the wheel, rather learning a system.  Within this system you can find ways to do things better, push the boundaries, and be involved in finding bugs and software suggestions.

11041775_10204101933810475_5826557307480571534_n
Installing antennas for w9smj repeaters

Many other HAMS tell me since I am a network guy I should love packet radio and technologies similar to that.  Not really, I have that in the interconnected networks called the Internet.  More and more effort is being focused on making connections hardened and resilient that packet radio is more nostalgia to me than anything.  We were doing such things with 300 baud modems in 1987.  Maybe, at one point I will dip my toe into such things.  But, it will have to be in a way that is an add on to existing systems, not starting from scratch.  I would have to have a “packet radio kit” that I assemble and hook into something. the CBRIDGE software that DMR uses really started my wheels turning.  It was not radio related, but it was a piece that I could wrap my head around.  For those of you who don’t know, CBRIDGE is what allows the DMR repeaters to talk over the IP network.  So by learning that piece, it motivated me to learn about DMR in general.  One day my mind said “hey you can use this and not be frustrated because sunspots knock it out for a week at a time.”

11701118_10204913908589337_71533226988685671_n
w9smj antenna on a water tower install

So, my advice for anyone looking at HAM radio who is not a tinkering type of person take a look at some of the other aspects of the hobby.  Things like DMR are “easy” to get into in relative terms.  You aren’t going out and buying a base unit, amplifiers, hardline, and spending hours tuning it all.  After you pass your test you can be up and running very quickly without soldering a single connection.  As technology evolves and is incorporated into the hobby, it opens up a new way to get folks like myself interested.

73
kd9emp

Categories
Uncategorized

Towers and pricing

One of the more common questions is what does a tower cost me to put up? As many of you know this can vary quite a bit.  We are going to approach this from a single vendor perspective.  What this means is I am going to take what it would cost to buy a commercially available tower from Texas Towers and put it in the air.

Disclaimers
1.I am not endorsing Texas Towers nor am I affiliated with them. They are one of the few tower manufacturers who publish prices.
2.Consumable costs will vary depending on where you are, time of year, state regulations, and maybe even the cycle of the moon.
3.This is geared toward small deployments.
4.Pricing is based upon the information I had available at time of this writing.

  • Texas towers makes a self supporting 100 foot tower (Model HD8-100).  This tower is rated to support 7.4 square feet of load in 110MPH winds. Cost $4,409.
  • The base which goes in the ground costs $225
  • Freight costs vary
  • Concrete. The base for this tower requires 6 cubic yards of concrete. Pricing near me is $95 per yard plus a $30 delivery fee with a 3 yard minimum.
  • If you are doing the 100 foot tower a small 80-100 foot crane can put this up.  The tower weighs around 500 pounds so a small crane is sufficient.  In my area a crane this size would be around $400 for a half day.  Since it’s not a huge crane it doesn’t require special permits in indiana
  • Engineering Fees for the base run around $1000.

So total cost for the tower: $5734 plus freight.

There are some other factors to consider. Permitting, labor to assemble tower, standoffs, etc. But this gives you a good ballpark estimate.

 

Categories
Uncategorized

Helpful OSPF times

OSPF can be a mystery to some.  Understanding the default timeouts can be helpful in troubleshooting.  Some vendors change these times so it is very important to realize this stuff if you start mixing vendors in your OSPF domains.

10 Seconds
Default OSPF hello timer on broadcast and point-to-point links

30 Seconds
Default OSPF hello timer on nonbroadcast links

40 Seconds
Default OSPF hold timer on broadcast and point-to-point links

120 Seconds
Default OSPF hold timer on nonbroadcast links

30 Minutes
OSPF LSA refresh timer

60 Minutes
OSPF LSA expiration timer