I see lots of people recommending Netgear NICs, but nobody has mentioned
Linksys, specifically the LNE100TX. I've had no problems whatsoever in
the 2 yrs I've been using them. (tulip driver) A quick pricewatch search
shows compuplus.com selling them for $4 right now.
I've had good luck with
PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, April 05, 2002 11:52 AM
Subject: Re: Linux box as firewall
I have been using Smoothwall for over a year now and have been very
pleased
with it. I have cable now but I had 56k when I first started using it.
Its
extremely easy to setup and maintain
wow, i've not seen that behavior.
Just for comparison purposes, I've got one in a Duron box (Duron 800)
and no problems. I plan on getting an athlon for that box, so i'll keep
and eye out, just in case.
thanks for the heads up
dave
On Tue, 2002-04-09 at 14:07, Steve Bremer wrote:
I see
Hell Yeah!!! *BSD owns.
Regards,
-
Muhammad Faisal Rauf Danka
Chief Technology Officer
Gem Internet Services (Pvt) Ltd.
web: www.gem.net.pk
voice: 92-021-111-GEMNET
Great is the Art of beginning, but Greater is the Art of ending.
--BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK
Version: 3.1
On Mon, 08 Apr 2002 16:27:25 EDT Jason Dixon wrote:
In fact, I have yet to come across *any* firewall
mini-distro's that use the 2.4.x kernel.
Jacques Nilo's Bering[1], one of the LEAF[2] varients, does.
I run a couple of LEAF-based firewall including one based on
Bering, and am *very*
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Does it support VPN out of the box? How about wireless?
- -Jason
On Tuesday 09 April 2002 12:54 am, Brad Fritz wrote:
On Mon, 08 Apr 2002 16:27:25 EDT Jason Dixon wrote:
In fact, I have yet to come across *any* firewall
mini-distro's that use
Network Card:
I would recommend you a NIC with a Realtek 8139 chipset.
It supports 10 / 100 MBit and is based on PCI. Usually, it is really easy to
configure it under Linux.
Usually it should not cost more than 15 USD.
About the Distribution:
I don't have a suggestion here, just one point to
In-Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hi there,
Just get this book:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/stores/detail/
-
/books/0735710996/contents/ref=pm_dp_ln_b_2/103-
1895198-4792665
It's great. step-by-step based.
I have it too.
Cya
Robbert
www.astaro.com
-Original Message-
From: David Hayes [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, April 05, 2002 5:49 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Linux box as firewall
Hi,
I've got an old p150 with about 64Mb Ram hanging around that I'm going to
set up as a firewall for when I get
information in this message do not relate to the anyone other than
the sender.
- Original Message -
From: Neil McKie [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: David Hayes [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, April 05, 2002 11:52 AM
Subject: Re: Linux box as firewall
I have been using Smoothwall
]]
Sent: 05 April 2002 20:13
To: David Hayes; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Linux box as firewall
comments in-line:
-Original Message-
From: David Hayes [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
snip
hopefully somebody can answer
1. Whats the best distribution to use, I have had quite a bit
I agree a firewall should not have installed services
or applications that are not required in its role.
Check out www.ipcop.org. Its 28 mb based on RedHat 7.2
but uses the 2.2 kernel and ipchains (not iptables).
Being a recent distro means its easier to
patch/update. In fact, the web interface
, 2002 11:52 AM
Subject: Re: Linux box as firewall
I have been using Smoothwall for over a year now and have been very
pleased
with it. I have cable now but I had 56k when I first started using it. Its
extremely easy to setup and maintain.
Other than Smoothwall, there are quite a few
You are not going to tell us that you are suggesting IPChains with
FreeBSD, are you?
FreeBSD includes ipfw (ipfirewall) and ipf (ipfilter) which can be
optionally compiled into the kernel. Ipf also includes ipnat which works
perfectly well together. For those interested into serious firewalling
Check out the Linux Router Project (http://www.linuxrouter.org). I'd run
that with either Ipchains or Iptables. I can't remember which is newer /
better / easier / prettier / less filling / better tasting / whatever.
Also check out the Linux Firewall How-to @
Hi,
1. Whats the best distribution to use, I have had quite a bit of experience
with Linux but not for the last 4/5 years so I'm a bit out of touch.
I can see the flames coming... :-) For someone who hasn't been
around Linux in awhile, I'd recommend a mainstream distro like
Red Hat, Suse
From: David Hayes [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Subject: Linux box as firewall
I've got an old p150 with about 64Mb Ram hanging around that I'm going to
set up as a firewall for when I get broadband. I have a few questions that
hopefully somebody can answer
1. Whats the best distribution to
I use freesco here which is great. It does firewalling, DNS, DHCP, port
forwarding (and blocking), and it runs off a floppy. Then theres the LRP
(Linux Router Project) - there's a few different options there..
Al.
-Original Message-
From: David Hayes [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent:
I have been using Smoothwall for over a year now and have been very pleased
with it. I have cable now but I had 56k when I first started using it. Its
extremely easy to setup and maintain.
Other than Smoothwall, there are quite a few firewall orientated
mini-distros like it but IMO none of them
I use and recommend Freesco, www.freesco.org .
Cheers,
Peter Hamilton
-Original Message-
From: David Hayes [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, 5 April 2002 10:49 p.m.
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Linux box as firewall
Hi,
I've got an old p150 with about 64Mb Ram hanging
A good cheap network card is Netgear. I have been using Netgear NICs
on my Redhat machines at home. As far as Linux distributions go, Redhat
is pretty easy to work with and the installation has gotten easier over
the past few years, plus there are lots of books on Redhat. Redhat 7.2
by default
On Fri, Apr 05, 2002 at 12:49:14PM +0200, David Hayes wrote:
Hi,
I've got an old p150 with about 64Mb Ram hanging around that I'm going to
set up as a firewall for when I get broadband. I have a few questions that
hopefully somebody can answer
1. Whats the best distribution to use, I have
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Hash: SHA1
On Fri, Apr 05, 2002 at 12:49:14PM +0200, David Hayes([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
1. Whats the best distribution to use, I have had quite a bit of experience
with Linux but not for the last 4/5 years so I'm a bit out of touch.
Slackware.
Just about any distribution could do the trick for you, but you want to make sure it
really will run on your old PC (I have a hunch some newer releases might be geared
toward higher-end boxes). I've played with both Slackware (all versions) and RedHat
(7.1 only) and I think Red Hat would be
i'm using RedHat 7.2 and i dun't have any complains, Netgear FA-311 seem
to work fine and they run around $20 i believe. I can't help you on the
modem part as i've been out of the modem stuff for a few years.
Bailey
David Hayes said:
Hi,
I've got an old p150 with about 64Mb Ram hanging
comments in-line:
-Original Message-
From: David Hayes [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
snip
hopefully somebody can answer
1. Whats the best distribution to use, I have had quite a bit
of experience
This is the best question you could ever ask the linux community if your intention is
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