Friday, August 21, 2009
Still notice less spam?
Sunday, August 16, 2009
Looking for servers in Asia
We'd like to make some of the perl.org services (Search CPAN for example) faster for users in Asia; so we're looking for servers (Xen or KVM based servers are fine as long as we can run RHEL) in for example Japan, Taiwan or Singapore.
If you think you might be able to help, please email [email protected].
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
PerlMonks compromised, some PAUSE accounts potentially at risk
Dear CPAN author,This email is being sent to inform you that all passwords on the popular Perl Monks website were compromised. Many CPAN authors have accounts there and in some cases have used the same password for PAUSE.
If you have any reason to suspect that your PAUSE account password is no longer secure, please visit https://pause.cpan.org/ and change it.
If your PAUSE account is not affected, please disregard this message and
accept apologies for the unsolicited email.
Regards,
PAUSE Administrators
Saturday, July 18, 2009
perldoc.perl.org updated
JJ has updated perldoc.perl.org to a new look and feel:
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Notice less spam?
I just (~11:30PM PDT, July 15th 2009) put into place a new source of data for our spam filtering. Hopefully this will result in less spam getting through to @cpan.org addresses, @pm.org addresses, and into the moderation queue for @perl.org mailing lists.
Sunday, July 5, 2009
Whoops!
Accidentally posted something to the wrong blog. Now posting this to see if I can get the RSS feed to regenerate. Ignore this post. And ignore the one before it too.
Sunday, June 14, 2009
email issues: .org blocked, now fixed
Monday, May 18, 2009
Attentive network services
One of the great things with Internap was that they were extremely proactive; the few times there was trouble in their network we'd have their mail telling about it at the same time as we got the monitoring alerts. When we unplugged all the equipment to move it a few months ago we had a voicemail from them when we came up above ground to cell phone coverage.
I'm happy to say that getting ip transit from Phyber is much of the same. Last week the MSN web crawler did ~10Mbit of traffic crawling one of the perl.org servers for a few days. When it stopped and the traffic dropped we had an email from Phyber checking in if everything was okay! We hadn't noticed that the traffic came and went, but they did. :-)
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
Friday, May 1, 2009
svn.perl.org briefly down
svn.perl.org will be unavailable for the next 15-25 minutes while we move it to faster storage.
Saturday, April 11, 2009
Minor network issue resolved
Some of the switches between us and our uplink didn't play nice together and it made the link effectively only allow each connection to transfer at a couple megabits a second (or less!)
Monday, April 6, 2009
IP transit from Phyber Communications
As part of the move a couple weeks ago the perl.org internet connection got upgraded from an often somewhat over-saturated 10Mbit connection (hey, that was pretty fast 8 years ago!) to a 100Mbit link generously provided by Phyber Communications.
Sunday, April 5, 2009
nntp.perl.org and pm.org lists temporarily down
The server running the nntp server and the pm.org lists has gone temporarily insane. We'll fix it in the morning.
Update: I lucked out that my "maybe this will fix it" attempt I started while going to sleep fixed it, so it was fixed shortly after breaking.