Sorry I can't say much about the boards you mentionned but I heard great things about the BIOSTAR NM70I-1037U which from what I've read should perform better than the J1800 or J1900. Also if you have a bit more budget take a look at the SuperMicro A1SAM-2550F and A1SRM-2558F (which have 4 1GB nics).

On 2015-11-12 17:48, Imre Oolberg wrote:
Hi!

So far i have used OpenBSD either on older servers or on ordinary
older PC's for packet filtering etc. Now i would like to give it a try
and use more-or-less contemporary so to say SoC form-factor board (i
think this is what i need because among other things i need to have
clamav and it better has 2 G ram). For me it is easier to choose from
what local it shop has (actually they put such computer together on
demand) and as i understand broadly speaking i have those choices

1. mini-itx or micro-atx, i would prefer micro-atx because it has more
PCIe slots in case i need for example extra NIC ports (although
mini-itx also has at least one pci or pcie)
2. j1800 and j1900 processors which are in itselt more of a desktop
stuff and older; or n3050 which are mobile and newer, i would prefer
which one works better with OpenBSD

I would be thankful if you could comment on running OpenBSD on these
three processors based for example on these specific boards (or
suggest something else which is known to work)

1. asrock q1900m - http://www.asrock.com/mb/Intel/Q1900M/
2. gigabyte ga-n3050N-d3h -
http://www.gigabyte.com/products/product-page.aspx?pid=5555#ov
3. asus j1800i-A - https://www.asus.com/Motherboards/J1800IA/

I looked over misc achive also and i saw people having more or less
success running openbsd on all of them. And if it wasnt already asked
enough, please comment if for example there is respectable indication
online somewhere that says OpenBSD runs on j1800-IC is it then most
probable that it runs also on j1800-IA (diagonally looking i see some
more io ports on j1800-ic model).


Best regards,

Imre

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