Friday, August 21, 2009

Still notice less spam?

A few weeks ago we posted that we were using a new source of anti-spam data.  Today we're happy to share that the new source was the invaluement Anti-Spam DNSBL.  It has resulted in almost a 10% reduction in spam that makes it through to our mailing list moderator, and zero complaints about improperly blocked mail. Thanks to Rob McEwen for developing and maintaining these lists.

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

If you're a CPAN author with a PAUSE account (or just a PerlMonks user) you may be interested in the below. (And you should already have received it as an email.) The same perpetrators have been getting press for also hacking Dan Kaminksy and Kevin Mitnick. Details on PerlMonks here and here.



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:


The main change is a complete new visual design, bringing a fresh, modern look to the site. Additionally there are a number of new features to aid navigation and usability - a floating page index window, recently read pages list, improved Pod rendering, and many more.


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.


As with any spam filtering change, there is a risk that we've inadvertently caused legitimate mail to be blocked.  If you notice this, please let us know.

In a few weeks, if all has gone well, I'll give more details on the new spam filtering data.  If things haven't gone well, we'll revert the changes and pretend this never happened.



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


For about the past 18 hours, you may have experienced issues sending emails to perl.org/cpan.org/pm.org addresses, if those emails contained a reference to any .org URI.  One of the uribl providers we use accidentally added all of .org to their list of things to block.  

This has likely resulted in mail being permanantly rejected, and it will not be resent.   If you sent such an email, you should have received a bounce message from your mail provider. If you are subscribed to any other .org email lists via your cpan.org address, you may wish to double check that you haven't been unsubscribed due to bouncing.

We have disabled the errant uribl provider, and informed them of the issue.  We may not re-enable them after they fix the problem.  (Although, historically, their data has been a very good signal for blocking spam.) 


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.  :-)



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!)

We got it resolved yesterday and now you can download Perl in just a few seconds again.


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.


We can't say enough good things about the insanely effective and proactive Internap NOC, but after years of getting free connectivity from them (it was setup by our friends at Ticketmaster who called in a few favors), it was time to try something new.  We're very grateful that Max Clark and Phyber got us hooked up.

One of the exciting things is that we now have an IPv6 connection, too.  Over the summer we're planning to start running some services on that.


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.