What do you want to do? If you want to protect your server you can only allow spcial adresses for the Query and if your client has an dynamic ip you can create a VPN or you can use SSH-Tunnel to connect over rinetd and you local interface to your query.That's something I have thought about, i don't really have the server resources to have that many people connect on VPN (trying to keep cost very low)Īs for SSH, It's something that I have done for myself in other situations, but that's just it it was for myself. I'm hoping that everything above helps clear up where I'm coming from on this and my use case. The way things are now with TeamSpeak, it doesn't seem like there's a way for me to tell if they're trying to brute force (I haven't found a "contiguous failed login attempts" value anywhere, if it exists let me know) and only the IP from the last successful login is logged in the database, so the values are "null" currently my only recourse that i've thought of is to ban the unique ID. I haven't had the pleasure of experiencing a (D)Dos yet, and I don't believe I've been under attack at all other than the 2 suspicious client names I saw in the database - it definitely wasn't anyone I knew that used those names, and whenever we let people have access to the server we give them the password obviously, so they would have eventually had a successful login and I would have been informed of the nickname. That's obviously a lot different than someone running a larger server, who will most likely only know some of the operators / assistant admins. There's a pretty tight-knit circle of trust as to who gives out the server info, and whenever anyone else is given the info I am made aware of what their nickame will be. Thinking about this a little more, I guess that my use case is probably a rather small one that might not meet many other peoples needs / wants - I run a fairly small server, and i know over 80% of the people that use it personally. Sorry about the delayed reply everyone, been crazy at work. It's a bit lengthy and convoluted, curious what anyone else thinks of this idea? Short of this simply being built into TeamSpeak 3, I can't think of another way to do that. What I'm getting at, is that if anyone with some SQL and scripting talent can make something that would periodically scan the database for clients that have 0 successful login attempts, one could just put that as a cronjob and have it log out to a file, and from there you could possibly get it to have the functionality both you and I are looking for? Based off of that, it was safe to assume i could place a ban on those unique IDs (the entries had no IPs associated with them. I noticed that for those entries, and only those, the value of "client_totalconnections" is zero and no other entry / nickname matched up with the client_unique_id of those suspect entries. Now while rummaging through the database looking for something, I noticed that under the "clients" table there where two entries that had very suspicious client_nickname entries. I'm running a small server for a bunch of my friends using Centos 6.4, and I have it using a dedicated MySQL server. However, there is a possible workaround i was thinking of. Same situation it seems - going through the logs, I don't see that failed logins are specifically logged. In the meantime, though, here's what you need to know about the steps you should take if your Snapchat is temporarily locked: 1.Sorry in advance for the necro-bump, but I'm having a similar frustration and i saw this thread was still open So, you know, it may be best to keep your fingers crossed and pray to the social media gods such a fate is not in your future. While it might bring you comfort knowing that often times users are only temporarily locked out for a few hours, you should also know that it is possible to become locked out of Snapchat for an extended period of time. If you happen to be a prolific Snapchat user, being locked out of the social media messaging app will probably be a bit more irksome to you than it would be for, say, someone like me whose Snapchat game is woefully slack. The good news is that they are easy to resolve, for the most part. And since it seems like this dilemma seems to be happening on the regular these days, you may be wondering, " Why is Snapchat temporarily locked?" As it turns out, there could be a multitude of reasons. While being locked out of Snapchat may not ruin your life (or even your day), it could definitely take some of the fun out of it.
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