Re: Network oriented services with FreeBSD

From: Ken Menzel (kenfreebsd_at_icarz.com)
Date: 03/28/05

  • Next message: Kris McElroy: "DansGuardian"
    To: "Vince" <jhary@unsane.co.uk>, "'Suporte Matik'" <asstec@matik.com.br>, <freebsd-isp@freebsd.org>
    Date: Mon, 28 Mar 2005 15:52:46 -0500
    
    

    ----- Original Message -----
    From: "Vince" <jhary@unsane.co.uk>
    To: "'Suporte Matik'" <asstec@matik.com.br>; <freebsd-isp@freebsd.org>
    Sent: Sunday, March 27, 2005 4:43 PM
    Subject: RE: Network oriented services with FreeBSD

    >
    >
    >> -----Original Message-----
    >> From: owner-freebsd-isp@freebsd.org
    >> [mailto:owner-freebsd-isp@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Suporte Matik
    >> Sent: 26 March 2005 17:29
    >> To: freebsd-isp@freebsd.org
    >> Subject: Re: Network oriented services with FreeBSD
    >>
    >> On Saturday 26 March 2005 11:53, Bob Martin wrote:
    >> > We do all of our routing and firewalls with FreeBSD, instead of
    >> > dedicated equipment like Cisco. In short, a Xeon based PC
    >> (we're using
    >> > mostly ~2ghz, single processor boxen) that can be bought
    >> for less than
    >> > a $1000 will do almost anything a $15,000 dollar name brand
    >> > router
    >> > will do. And it will do a few things the named brand units
    >> wont, like
    >> > traffic analysis. Instead of having the dedicated equipment and a
    >> > server, we just have a server.
    >> >
    >>
    >> Hi
    >> probably not a fair comparism since your $15K router will
    >> have some pretty clever interfaces which you possible do not
    >> get or at least have to buy to put them into your PC and
    >> configure them if you can.
    >> Lots of things IOS can do FreeBSd can still not, as CEF,
    >> class maps, loadbalance, backuproute, VoIP to call only some
    >> IMO BGP with Zebra on FBSD also is not close and reliable
    >> enough to CISCO BGP .
    >> So what you say may be ok for a simple router with some
    >> functions but a cisco 2xxx does not cost 15k but all depends
    >> on size of the network. May be an ISP with a small link does
    >> it well without dedicated router but if you talk about
    >> network services I don't know ...
    >> And don't forget the disks, I will not even think about if a
    >> HD crashes on a network router. I have some Ciscos running a
    >> couple of years now without touching them.
    >> Hans
    >
    >
    > Disks are not too much of an issue as with some tweaking you can
    > either
    > A) nfs boot your freebsd router from redundant sources
    > B) use pcmcia or similar solid state filesystem
    > C) use software/hardware mirroring.
    > And the one time a freebsd box I had had a hard disk failure it
    > stayed up
    > Untill I replaced it anyway as it had minimal disk usage.
    >
    > Also with most of the hardware routers its not the hardware that
    > costs
    > Its support and upgrades. I've had freebsd Firewalls run for at
    > least
    > 3 years with no reboot so uptime is hardly an issue. I havent ever
    > had
    > to have a router run that long As I'm quite new to the ISP rather
    > than
    > end user side of things.
    >
    >
    > Vince
    >
    http://www.freesbie.org/

    Even better than mirroring get rid of the hard drive completely with a
    bootable CD-image currently based on FreeBSD 5.3.
    FreeSBIE is a LiveCD based on the FreeBSD Operating system, or even
    easier, a FreeBSD-based operating system that works directly from a
    CD, without touching your hard drive.

    Ken

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