RE: [leaf-user] multiple static ip address router/firewall

2005-07-14 Thread Andrew Nance
It is hard to estimate but somewhere around 750 Kbps to 1.5 Mbps total
bandwidth.

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Arne Bernin
Sent: Wednesday, July 13, 2005 11:32 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [leaf-user] multiple static ip address router/firewall

On Wed, 2005-07-13 at 10:06 -0500, Andrew Nance wrote:
 I plan on having multiple video streams going through this router/firewall
 nearly 24/7. (i.e. Lots of bandwidth, very few connections) Do you think I
 need the extra cpu of a regular computer or will the wrap be able to
handle
 it?
 

Can you estimate how much bandwidth you use (average/peek) ?

 Thanks,
 Andrew

--arne

-- 
Arne Bernin [EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.ucBering.de





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RE: [leaf-user] multiple static ip address router/firewall

2005-07-14 Thread Jaime Nebrera
El jue, 14-07-2005 a las 11:18 -0500, Andrew Nance escribió:
 It is hard to estimate but somewhere around 750 Kbps to 1.5 Mbps total
 bandwidth.

  From the graph, you see WRAP box is capable of sustaining around 4Mbps
for 50 firewall rules (1500PPS and 350bytes/package). I think you could
live with it :)

-- 
Jaime Nebrera - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Consultor TI - ENEO Tecnologia SL
Telf.- 95 455 40 62 - 619 04 55 18



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Re: [leaf-user] multiple static ip address router/firewall

2005-07-14 Thread Charles Steinkuehler

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Andrew Nance wrote:

| It is hard to estimate but somewhere around 750 Kbps to 1.5 Mbps total
| bandwidth.

Almost anything fairly modern (ie: Pentium-class PCI based system) should be
able to handle this kind of bandwidth.  Even 486 based systems with EISA
cards (should you actually be able to find one) could probably move this
much data around.  Most of those 'black-box' routers from Linksys, D-Link,
et-al. will typically handle 3-5 MBits/s or more fairly easily (remember,
they're engineered to hook to cable modems, and would look bad if they were
a bottleneck).

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Charles Steinkuehler
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Re: [leaf-user] Bering-uClibc packages in testing

2005-07-14 Thread KP Kirchdoerfer
Am Donnerstag 14 Juli 2005 00:35 schrieb Peter Mueller:
  as you probably know there some packages in testing for
  Bering-uClibc:

 Is ethtool supposed to be in testing?  I think a lot of people use this..

Maybe it qualifies to be moved to the general section - but it's still in 
testing, cause we either never got some feedback that it's working as 
expected, or we just forgot about it :)

kp


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Re: [leaf-user] multiple static ip address router/firewall

2005-07-14 Thread Marko Nurmenniemi

Charles Steinkuehler wrote:


Andrew Nance wrote:

| It is hard to estimate but somewhere around 750 Kbps to 1.5 Mbps total
| bandwidth.

Almost anything fairly modern (ie: Pentium-class PCI based system) 
should be

able to handle this kind of bandwidth.  Even 486 based systems with EISA
cards (should you actually be able to find one) could probably move this
much data around.
- --
Charles Steinkuehler


Testing my brand new set-up couple of years ago I got 700Kbps FTP 
transmissions with two SMC (ISA 10Mbps cards) in our company intranet. 
PC was a 486/50MHz with Bering 1.x from a floppy. It should be 
reasonable close to a ISA maximum?

Processor load was somewhere 20-30% if I remember correctly.

I have had the same machine running next to my ADSL for four years 
now...hey it's only 15 years old, it is supposed to work for another 10 
years atleast!


-M


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RE: [leaf-user] multiple static ip address router/firewall

2005-07-14 Thread Peter Mueller
 Andrew Nance wrote:
 | It is hard to estimate but somewhere around 750 Kbps to 1.5 
 Mbps total 
 | bandwidth.
 
 Almost anything fairly modern (ie: Pentium-class PCI based 
 system) should be able to handle this kind of bandwidth.  
 Even 486 based systems with EISA cards (should you actually 
 be able to find one) could probably move this much data 
 around.  Most of those 'black-box' routers from Linksys, 
 D-Link, et-al. will typically handle 3-5 MBits/s or more 
 fairly easily (remember, they're engineered to hook to cable 
 modems, and would look bad if they were a bottleneck).

A 486 can handle a T1 (1.5mbps) or E1 (2mbps) while encrypting with 3DES and
IPSEC.  A pentium-75mhz can encrypt ~10mpbs.  Both of these rates assume
decent NICs.  Most statistics for bandwidth include packets per second (PPS)
and the # of bits or bytes in those packets.

I think a WRAP can handle your load easily unless you are running some huge
amount of firewall rules and QOS.  In fact, I know so :) even though I don't
own one :(.  TomsHardware has a nice review :
http://www.tomsnetworking.com/Reviews-169-ProdID-WRAP1D2-3.php.   As you can
see 266mhz WRAP can do ~40mbps NAT, or ~3.5mpbs Ipsec/3DES.  This means it is
somewhere between a fast 486 and a pentium 75mhz in speed for encryption.  If
I remember correctly a Pentium 75mhz can only do 20-30mpbs NAT so apparently
the WRAP is faster for this kind of thing.

Regards,

P


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[leaf-user] Webconf issues

2005-07-14 Thread Richard Amerman
I have been trying to get webconf working on a new uClibc box but can't
get anywhere. I did have weblet working but took that off and did
everything I could find online to setup webconf.

I'm on the latest beta.

Here is one thing I get:

Jul 14 12:23:03 RBAFW mini_httpd[10398]: socket :: - Address family not
supported by protocol
Jul 14 12:23:03 RBAFW mini_httpd[10398]: bind 0.0.0.0 - Address already
in use
Jul 14 12:23:03 RBAFW mini_httpd[10398]: can't bind to any address

Any ideas?

Richard Amerman


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[leaf-user] ide flash drive question

2005-07-14 Thread Andrew Nance
I want to run a 32 MB IDE flash memory as my HD for bering uclibc 2.2.3.
According to the directions, I need to give it a first bootable partition
and DOS format it.

Call me a stupid noob but I don't know how to do that.  The drive is 6
months old but I have never ever used it before.

Would someone please give me instructions on how to do this using windows
XP. I could also  but could also use knoppix if its easier.

Thanks,
Andrew



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Re: [leaf-user] ide flash drive question

2005-07-14 Thread Victor McAllister

Andrew Nance wrote:


I want to run a 32 MB IDE flash memory as my HD for bering uclibc 2.2.3.
According to the directions, I need to give it a first bootable partition
and DOS format it.

Call me a stupid noob but I don't know how to do that.  The drive is 6
months old but I have never ever used it before.

Would someone please give me instructions on how to do this using windows
XP. I could also  but could also use knoppix if its easier.

Thanks,
Andrew

 

http://www.bootdisk.com/ Windows is not nice to do this as I think you 
have to use lock to get it to work in windows. You can download a DOS 
disk from http://www.bootdisk.com/ and use fdisk and format. 

You need to make sure the BIOS on your computer is correctly setup to 
read the CF.  You can then use syslinux.com in DOS.  It is available on 
the net and probably in the LEAF.

syslinux -s c:
assuming the CF is recognized as the C drive. 

You can make a stripped LEAF boot diskette with the hdutil lrp and do it 
from Linux and follow the instructions listed on the leaf.


syslinux -s /dev/hda1.

After that all you have to do is copy the LRPs over with DOS or plug it 
into a CF to USB adaptor and use Windows explorer to copy them over.





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[leaf-user] Image CF drive

2005-07-14 Thread Richard Amerman
Does anyone know of any windows tools that can do a disk image of a CF
card?

I have multiple identical CF cards I need to propagate a uClibc install
to, bootable portion and all. The only tools I have found that work with
CF cards so far have been for linux.

Thanks!

Richard Amerman


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Re: [leaf-user] ide flash drive question

2005-07-14 Thread Victor McAllister

Andrew Nance wrote:


I want to run a 32 MB IDE flash memory as my HD for bering uclibc 2.2.3.
According to the directions, I need to give it a first bootable partition
and DOS format it.

Call me a stupid noob but I don't know how to do that.  The drive is 6
months old but I have never ever used it before.

Would someone please give me instructions on how to do this using windows
XP. I could also  but could also use knoppix if its easier.

Thanks,
Andrew


 

Sorry - I scrambled things and sent it inadvertently. 

You can make a LEAF boot diskette - strip the LRPs not needed and 
install ideutil.lrp and do all the stuff like

syslinux -s /dev/hda  etc

or you can go to http://www.bootdisk.com and fdisk and format it in 
DOS.  This is a mess to do in Widows because it locks the CF



Make sure the machine you set it up on has the bios setup to correctly 
read the CF if you are using a CF to IDE adaptor


fdisk

format c:

syslinux -s c:  using syslinux.com (download from the net as this is the 
DOS program not syslinux.exe


You can copy the LRPs with DOS copy or windows explorer (CF - usb 
adaptor) or linux cp






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RE: [leaf-user] Image CF drive

2005-07-14 Thread Peter Mueller
 Does anyone know of any windows tools that can do a disk 
 image of a CF card?
 
 I have multiple identical CF cards I need to propagate a 
 uClibc install to, bootable portion and all. The only tools I 
 have found that work with CF cards so far have been for linux.

Disk Dump (for Windows) is the tool you want.  I guess ghost (commercial) or
similar would work, too.

http://uranus.it.swin.edu.au/~jn/linux/rawwrite/dd.htm

PS - your webconf issue looks like it is because the old mini_httpd is still
running.

Regards,

P


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RE: [leaf-user] ide flash drive question

2005-07-14 Thread Peter Mueller
 syslinux -s c:  using syslinux.com (download from the net as 
 this is the DOS program not syslinux.exe

FYI I have never had much luck with syslinux and CF-IDE.  It sometimes worked
with windows boot disks, though.  I recommend the Dos 6.22 from
http://www.bootdisk.com/.

It will most likely not work the first time you try it, but fiddle with the
order and eventually you will get it.

(FYI - my syslinux trial was a year+ ago, maybe it is better now..)

Regards,

P


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Re: [leaf-user] Image CF drive

2005-07-14 Thread Charles Steinkuehler

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Richard Amerman wrote:

| Does anyone know of any windows tools that can do a disk image of a CF
| card?
|
| I have multiple identical CF cards I need to propagate a uClibc install
| to, bootable portion and all. The only tools I have found that work with
| CF cards so far have been for linux.

Have you tried WinImage:
http://www.winimage.com/winimage.htm

It works great for floppies, but I'm not sure if it will work for a CF card.

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[leaf-user] RE:Image CF drive

2005-07-14 Thread Vic Berdin
Hi,

I use dd.exe - port for the GNU dd tool. I don't recall however, which
site I got it. But doing a quick google,
Here's a site that seems to host it:

http://users.erols.com/gmgarner/forensics/

Regards,
Vic

 --__--__--
 
 Message: 10
 Date: Thu, 14 Jul 2005 16:37:34 -0700
 From: Richard Amerman [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: leaf-user@lists.sourceforge.net
 Subject: [leaf-user] Image CF drive
 
 Does anyone know of any windows tools that can do a disk 
 image of a CF card?
 
 I have multiple identical CF cards I need to propagate a 
 uClibc install to, bootable portion and all. The only tools I 
 have found that work with CF cards so far have been for linux.
 
 Thanks!
 
 Richard Amerman

-- 
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Anti-Virus.
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