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#1 (permalink) Top |
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Paranoid Geeky Geek
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ok, i finally decided to config either SmoothWall or IP-corp but, which is better
i'm almost certain i'm going with SmoothWall, are there many differences ? Edit: & what else other distro's i should consider
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Last edited by donkey42; 23-07-2008 at 07:24 PM. Reason: edit |
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#2 (permalink) Top |
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Nonconformist Geek
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Smoothwall is crippled unless you buy a commercial license. IPCop is the 100% open-source branch of Smoothwall by some of the original developers.
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#3 (permalink) Top | |
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Paranoid Geeky Geek
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Quote:
thankies AT, that was exactly the advise i neededBTW: sticking to *nix Firewalls, is that correct, or are BSD based firewalls also good ?
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#4 (permalink) Top |
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Nonconformist Geek
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BSD is included in the generic *nix connotation, as in "Linux/UNIX". But to answer your question, BSD firewalls are also good. A few noteworthy ones are m0n0wall and PFSense.
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#5 (permalink) Top | |
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Paranoid Geeky Geek
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Quote:
thankies, i'll look into them, although advanced research will cause delay, but never mind
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#6 (permalink) Top | |
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Paranoid Geeky Geek
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i've just reread the post & originally meant Linux, i totally forgot about UNIX
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#7 (permalink) Top |
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Geek Geek Geek!
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IPCop is the dog's bollocks...
I deployed IPCop in a 24 user (or PC) scenario and it worked flawlessly. Its an excellent piece of kit. Though I must admit I am not sure that you would see any benefits, what with you being the only user on the network. You'd be better off with a dedicated home-user orientated hardware firewall.
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#8 (permalink) Top | ||
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Paranoid Geeky Geek
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Quote:
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yeah, but i'm always hopeful i'll meet someone stupid enough to put up with me
Off Topic: i went to cinema to see Ku-Fu Panda last week with my carer & we took her 9 year old daughter to use as an excuse, & i loved it
nobody's THAT stupid
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#9 (permalink) Top | |
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Nonconformist Geek
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Quote:
Also, If you're using your bandwidth to its maximum potential, traffic shaping makes a *huge* impact on overall throughput by buffering the packets for you, passing them as bandwidth is available. So even with a single PC that is a heavy user, you'll notice the difference.
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#10 (permalink) Top |
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Geek Geek Geek!
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Cmon, as a single user, traffic shaping is going to make little difference! Take my current network for example. I share the internet with an house mate, and our router is an extremely low-grade Dynamode Wireless Router. This router offers nothing extraordinary. No traffic shaping, nothing advanced like that. Yet for two users it's more than adequate. It offers everything that I might need, like port forwarding etc. I don't believe that a single user like Donkey42 could possibly need anything more then what I have myself.
Sure IPCop is excellent, but its overkill for Donkey and even myself...
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#11 (permalink) Top | |
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Paranoid Geeky Geek
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Quote:
BTW: my router is here
Off Topic:
donkey takes a step back to let AT & mega battle it out with spoons at the ready
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Last edited by donkey42; 26-07-2008 at 09:43 PM. Reason: fix |
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#12 (permalink) Top | ||
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Nonconformist Geek
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This example applies even to a single user, since you might want to run BitTorrent in the background while playing games online (or whatever). This isn't feasible without a decent firewall, since the latency on the game packets would be too high to be enjoyable, as the pipe's flooded with torrent packets and everything is contesting the same bandwidth. So, my question is this. If you already have the means to build a proper firewall (IPCop, m0n0wall, PFSense, Untangle, etc), why not go for it?
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#13 (permalink) Top |
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Geek Geek Geek!
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<drunken nonsense deleted for the good of mankind>
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#14 (permalink) Top | |||
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Nonconformist Geek
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Oh? Would you mind pointing out which part, exactly?
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So why not? If you have a crappy PC laying around, it costs around $5-10 tops to throw a few more NICs in it, and the software is free. A cheap plastic router will cost $20-100, so I fail to see the big advantage of using a crap one if you already have a throw-away PC for use as a decent one.
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#15 (permalink) Top |
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Geek Geek Geek!
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Got a little too drunk last night. My last post was insanely harsh so I've deleted it. Apologies...
Moving back on track, there are other reasons why IPCop may not be a good idea for Donkey. A lot of people run IPCop on ancient hardware, but that is a problem in itself because this older hardware is more likely to fail and is certainly not designed to be used 27/4. I've had two old computers give up the ghost whilst running IPCop! In both cases the motherboards just failed. One suffered from leaking capacitors! The electrolyle was all over the motherboard! Not nice! One answer is to use newer hardware of course, but personally I don't like the idea of using a Pentium 4 based PC for IPCop when that computer is powerful enough for normal use. But I suppose for some that sacrifice is worthwhile if it means they have a rock solid system running IPCop that's reliable. Another problem with the IPCop solution is power usage. An dusty old Pentium 2 spec PC is going to use far more electricity than a dedicated router. This is bad for two reasons. The most obvious is electricity costs. I don't know exactly how much more expensive running IPCop would be, but it's certainly going to be more expensive than a router. The second issue, and certainly the more important for Al Gore, is the extra burden on the environment! Not that he can talk anyway, what with flying all over the world in private jets, but that's another story
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