Not sure why this command has to be so obscure, but I stumbled on this while writing a training course tonight – quite a nice way to see if packets are hitting your policies:
imtech@srx220-1-POD3> show security policies hit-count Logical system: root-logical-system Index From zone To zone Name Policy count 1 VR3a VR3b P1 0 2 VR3a untrust 3to1VPN 8320 3 VR3a untrust P1 3249 4 VR3b VR3a P1 0 5 VR3b untrust P1 0 6 untrust junos-host P1 8 7 untrust VR3a 1to3 5523 8 untrust VR3a P1 5 9 untrust VR3b permit-to-3b 0 10 untrust VR3b DEFAULT-DENY 16
It's spinoff season in the Valley.


The Craft of Research, Kindle Location 2392
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VMware contributes to help CENX push Lifecycle Service Orchestration.
In April 2015, my partner and I decided it was time to move in to our own (first) place together. As a teleworker this brings it’s own set of issues, mainly in the name of connectivity and climate. BT traditionally have been able to offer generous enough requirements, but as enterprise technology has evolved to consume more bandwidth, BT have slowly fallen behind. FTTC or Fibre To The Cabinet (VDSL), also known as “Superfast Fibre Optic Broadband” offered by the likes of BT and Sky to name but a couple, serves my needs well providing I have access to a local street cabinet that has a spare port on a VDSL capable device.
So it turns out, after confirmation from BT that our to be purchased house can indeed receive FTTC, we purchased, completed and started renovation work. It was time to place the BT order!