> > The answer is a little bit ackward, for the real real question is not > > the number of bits per second but rather the number of packets per > > second the firewall will be subjected to and how complex the rule sets are. > > Thus it depends on the application that will pass through the firewall. > > > > So the safe answer is, if you will use an "old" machine as a firewall, > > chances are, it will perform well considering a 486/66 with a pair of > > good NICs could filter close to 5Mbps *but* there is no guarantee > > because of the item I mentioned above.
from : <http://www.openbsd.org/faq/pf/perf.html> "There are no easy answers to those questions. For some applications, a 486/66 with a pair of good ISA NICs could filter and NAT close to 5Mbps, but for other applications a much faster machine with much more efficient PCI NICs might end up being insufficient. The real question is not the number of bits per second but rather the number of packets per second and the complexity of the ruleset." -- Eduardo Tongson pornadmin.net/~tongson -- Philippine Linux Users' Group (PLUG) Mailing List [email protected] (#PLUG @ irc.free.net.ph) Official Website: http://plug.linux.org.ph Searchable Archives: http://marc.free.net.ph . To leave, go to http://lists.q-linux.com/mailman/listinfo/plug . Are you a Linux newbie? To join the newbie list, go to http://lists.q-linux.com/mailman/listinfo/ph-linux-newbie
