

I use atomic moves. I used to have everything configured to land in a staging directory and once ready for it to “go live” move it to the appropriate location and kick off a scan.
Using a .ignore
file is probably the simplest though.
I use atomic moves. I used to have everything configured to land in a staging directory and once ready for it to “go live” move it to the appropriate location and kick off a scan.
Using a .ignore
file is probably the simplest though.
Are you okay? They asked a very specific question and you’re coming in with answers that don’t matter.
When did I say anything about dhcp or mention randomized mac being a silver bullet for privacy? Your opinion on how effective it is or isn’t has nothing to do with the fact that they can turn it off for their network and it will solve the issue they’re asking about.
Eh, in pihole mac or ip address is a valid way to add a device to a group so you can give it a different policy. I have multiple access points but they’re not meshed so if I randomized I’d have to have multiple client entries for a single device. Or turning off randomization for my trusted networks means just 1 client entry.
Assuming Android, you’ll want to deselect randomized MAC for your wifi. No reason to randomize on a trusted network. You can turn it off on a per network basis.
Oh interesting. I just saw it was recently updated so I went with it. I’ll have to look into what’s going on with it though.
Thanks for the Thunder suggestion. This thing seems really solid.
Wait what happened with Raccoon? I recently switched to it after finally giving up on the Sync dream.
This is a fun little rehash of the “what naming scheme should I use for my servers” discussion that will never end.
I agree, I use fun cutesy shit as aliases and whatnot but actual hostnames are boring and logical.