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Full Discussion: Network attack - so what?
Special Forums Cybersecurity Network attack - so what? Post 302384677 by Neo on Wednesday 6th of January 2010 04:54:05 AM
Old 01-06-2010
Quote:
Originally Posted by Action
In my logs I find entries about attacks on my system. I know IP addresses, I know date and time and I know what they tried to do. So what's the best I can do now? Tell everybody that there are cybercriminals on that network? Write an email to their admin? Anything else?
This question cannot be answered unless you describe the nature of the attack.

Your question is so vague, that we have no idea, really what you are talking about. A web attack? An SSH login attempt? A simple scan? Spam? What kind of attack?

Why would you ask such a question without providing any details and expect to get a useful answer?
 

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Path::Dispatcher::Match(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation			      Path::Dispatcher::Match(3pm)

NAME
Path::Dispatcher::Match - the result of a successful rule match SYNOPSIS
my $rule = Path::Dispatcher::Rule::Tokens->new( tokens => [ 'attack', qr/^w+$/ ], block => sub { my $match = shift; attack($match->pos(2)) }, ); my $match = $rule->match("attack dragon"); # introspection $match->path # "attack dragon" $match->leftover # empty string (populated with prefix rules) $match->rule # $rule $match->positional_captures # ["attack", "dragon"] (decided by the rule) $match->pos(1) # "attack" $match->pos(2) # "dragon" $match->run # attack("dragon") DESCRIPTION
If a Path::Dispatcher::Rule successfully matches a path, it creates one or more "Path::Dispatcher::Match" objects. ATTRIBUTES
rule The Path::Dispatcher::Rule that created this match. path The path that the rule matched. leftover The rest of the path. This is populated when the rule matches a prefix of the path. positional_captures Any positional captures generated by the rule. For example, Path::Dispatcher::Rule::Regex populates this with the capture variables. named_captures Any named captures generated by the rule. For example, Path::Dispatcher::Rule::Regex populates this with named captures. parent The parent match object, if applicable (which may be set if this match is the child of, for exampl, a Path::Dispatcher::Rule::Under prefix) METHODS
run Executes the rule's codeblock with the same arguments. pos($i) Returns the $ith positional capture, 1-indexed. perl v5.12.4 2011-08-30 Path::Dispatcher::Match(3pm)
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