Re: freebsd compatible routers

2004-08-18 Thread Peter Ulrich Kruppa
On Wed, 18 Aug 2004, Kevin Stevens wrote:
On Aug 18, 2004, at 01:40, Dino Vliet wrote:
@home we have a cable internet connection and I want
to attach a router to it to be able to share the
internet connection of 1 standalone winxp pc and a
laptop running freebsd 4.10
The cable connection uses dhcp to assign me a
ip-address. I also would like a switch to be able to
set up a lan between the pc's at home.
Buy the cheapest 
thing on sale (should be < $30 new if you shop around) and replace it later 
if you need some specific different feature.
If you are new to FreeBSD this really is the best idea to get 
started.
With some experience you will be able to connect your FreeBSD 
machine directly to the internet and make it a gateway for all 
other workstations.

Regards,
Uli.
+---+
|Peter Ulrich Kruppa|
| Wuppertal |
|  Germany  |
+---+
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Re: freebsd compatible routers

2004-08-18 Thread Kevin Stevens
On Aug 18, 2004, at 01:40, Dino Vliet wrote:
@home we have a cable internet connection and I want
to attach a router to it to be able to share the
internet connection of 1 standalone winxp pc and a
laptop running freebsd 4.10
The cable connection uses dhcp to assign me a
ip-address. I also would like a switch to be able to
set up a lan between the pc's at home.
Most of the products out there combine a 4/5 port switch with the 
router.

Personally I would favour a netgear solution but some
of the don't allow port forwarding and even though I
don't know at the moment if I will need this, I do
want a product which is capable of doing that:-)
I'm not aware of any router/firewall products which don't offer port 
forwarding, though sometimes it's called something different.  Which 
Netgear product are you referring to?

What are the best freebsd compatible routers?
Well, Cisco 3660s are nice...  The phrase "freebsd compatible router" 
is pretty meaningless, FreeBSD uses a standard TCP/IP implementation 
and so do routers, so they are all interoperable.  The only thing you 
might find is a product that has a Windows-specific setup program, but 
that is very rare on current equipment - they all use browser-based 
setups.  Buy the cheapest thing on sale (should be < $30 new if you 
shop around) and replace it later if you need some specific different 
feature.

Will te fact that I use freebsd on my laptop be a
serious constraint?
Depends on what you're trying to do with it.
KeS
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freebsd compatible routers

2004-08-18 Thread Dino Vliet
Hi there, I'm a network novice and want to establish
this:

@home we have a cable internet connection and I want
to attach a router to it to be able to share the
internet connection of 1 standalone winxp pc and a
laptop running freebsd 4.10
The cable connection uses dhcp to assign me a
ip-address. I also would like a switch to be able to
set up a lan between the pc's at home. 

Personally I would favour a netgear solution but some
of the don't allow port forwarding and even though I
don't know at the moment if I will need this, I do
want a product which is capable of doing that:-)

What are the best freebsd compatible routers?

Will te fact that I use freebsd on my laptop be a
serious constraint?

Brgds



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