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Searched hist:"98 d12bd8" (Results 1 – 8 of 8) sorted by relevance

/openbsd/usr.sbin/tcpdump/
H A Dtcpdump.898d12bd8 Wed May 05 23:16:02 GMT 2004 frantzen <frantzen@openbsd.org> Use RFC1323 PAWS timestamps as a logical extension to the conventional TCP
sequence numbers by taking advantage of the maximum 1KHz clock as an upperbound
on the timestamp. Typically gains 10 to 18 bits of additional security against
blind data insertion attacks. More if the TS Echo wasn't optional :-(
Enabled with: scrub on !lo0 all reassemble tcp
ok dhartmei@. documentation help from jmc@
/openbsd/sys/net/
H A Dpf_norm.c98d12bd8 Wed May 05 23:16:02 GMT 2004 frantzen <frantzen@openbsd.org> Use RFC1323 PAWS timestamps as a logical extension to the conventional TCP
sequence numbers by taking advantage of the maximum 1KHz clock as an upperbound
on the timestamp. Typically gains 10 to 18 bits of additional security against
blind data insertion attacks. More if the TS Echo wasn't optional :-(
Enabled with: scrub on !lo0 all reassemble tcp
ok dhartmei@. documentation help from jmc@
H A Dpf_ioctl.c98d12bd8 Wed May 05 23:16:02 GMT 2004 frantzen <frantzen@openbsd.org> Use RFC1323 PAWS timestamps as a logical extension to the conventional TCP
sequence numbers by taking advantage of the maximum 1KHz clock as an upperbound
on the timestamp. Typically gains 10 to 18 bits of additional security against
blind data insertion attacks. More if the TS Echo wasn't optional :-(
Enabled with: scrub on !lo0 all reassemble tcp
ok dhartmei@. documentation help from jmc@
H A Dpfvar.h98d12bd8 Wed May 05 23:16:02 GMT 2004 frantzen <frantzen@openbsd.org> Use RFC1323 PAWS timestamps as a logical extension to the conventional TCP
sequence numbers by taking advantage of the maximum 1KHz clock as an upperbound
on the timestamp. Typically gains 10 to 18 bits of additional security against
blind data insertion attacks. More if the TS Echo wasn't optional :-(
Enabled with: scrub on !lo0 all reassemble tcp
ok dhartmei@. documentation help from jmc@
H A Dpf.c98d12bd8 Wed May 05 23:16:02 GMT 2004 frantzen <frantzen@openbsd.org> Use RFC1323 PAWS timestamps as a logical extension to the conventional TCP
sequence numbers by taking advantage of the maximum 1KHz clock as an upperbound
on the timestamp. Typically gains 10 to 18 bits of additional security against
blind data insertion attacks. More if the TS Echo wasn't optional :-(
Enabled with: scrub on !lo0 all reassemble tcp
ok dhartmei@. documentation help from jmc@
/openbsd/sbin/pfctl/
H A Dpfctl.c98d12bd8 Wed May 05 23:16:02 GMT 2004 frantzen <frantzen@openbsd.org> Use RFC1323 PAWS timestamps as a logical extension to the conventional TCP
sequence numbers by taking advantage of the maximum 1KHz clock as an upperbound
on the timestamp. Typically gains 10 to 18 bits of additional security against
blind data insertion attacks. More if the TS Echo wasn't optional :-(
Enabled with: scrub on !lo0 all reassemble tcp
ok dhartmei@. documentation help from jmc@
H A Dpfctl_parser.c98d12bd8 Wed May 05 23:16:02 GMT 2004 frantzen <frantzen@openbsd.org> Use RFC1323 PAWS timestamps as a logical extension to the conventional TCP
sequence numbers by taking advantage of the maximum 1KHz clock as an upperbound
on the timestamp. Typically gains 10 to 18 bits of additional security against
blind data insertion attacks. More if the TS Echo wasn't optional :-(
Enabled with: scrub on !lo0 all reassemble tcp
ok dhartmei@. documentation help from jmc@
/openbsd/share/man/man5/
H A Dpf.conf.598d12bd8 Wed May 05 23:16:02 GMT 2004 frantzen <frantzen@openbsd.org> Use RFC1323 PAWS timestamps as a logical extension to the conventional TCP
sequence numbers by taking advantage of the maximum 1KHz clock as an upperbound
on the timestamp. Typically gains 10 to 18 bits of additional security against
blind data insertion attacks. More if the TS Echo wasn't optional :-(
Enabled with: scrub on !lo0 all reassemble tcp
ok dhartmei@. documentation help from jmc@