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    Anyone Using *BSD Here?

    IT Discussion
    bsd freebsd trueos openbsd netbsd dragonfly bsd unix
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    • S
      scottalanmiller
      last edited by scottalanmiller

      Just curiosity, I am a pretty big fan of the BSD operating system family. Anyone here using any BSD, like FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD or Dragonfly in the community? We really do not have any but have used it in the past and plan on having a bit in our lab environment which is coming online soon.

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        thanksajdotcom @scottalanmiller
        last edited by

        @scottalanmiller Not at the moment.

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          Nic @thanksajdotcom
          last edited by

          @ajstringham when I'm on a Mac I do 🙂

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            Bill Kindle @scottalanmiller
            last edited by

            @scottalanmiller Once I get that HP server for my home lab I'm retiring my DD-WRT router for Pfsense, which is FreeBSD isn't?

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              scottalanmiller @Bill Kindle
              last edited by

              @Bill-Kindle said:

              @scottalanmiller Once I get that HP server for my home lab I'm retiring my DD-WRT router for Pfsense, which is FreeBSD isn't?

              Yes. pfSense is built on NanoBSD which is just a stripped down installer for FreeBSD.

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                thanksajdotcom @Bill Kindle
                last edited by

                @Bill-Kindle Why are you retiring a dd-wrt router?! For shame!

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                  Bill Kindle @thanksajdotcom
                  last edited by

                  @ajstringham said:

                  @Bill-Kindle Why are you retiring a dd-wrt router?! For shame!

                  Hardware limitation of current router, no DDwrt fault.

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                    scottalanmiller
                    last edited by

                    BSD is awesome because it will install on anything. Nothing runs on more hardware types than BSD.

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                      thanksajdotcom @Bill Kindle
                      last edited by

                      @Bill-Kindle said:

                      @ajstringham said:

                      @Bill-Kindle Why are you retiring a dd-wrt router?! For shame!

                      Hardware limitation of current router, no DDwrt fault.

                      Ok, so gets yourself a new and better router that can handle dd-wrt. WNDR4000 works great for this. Netgear N750.

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                        scottalanmiller @thanksajdotcom
                        last edited by

                        @ajstringham said:

                        @Bill-Kindle said:

                        @ajstringham said:

                        @Bill-Kindle Why are you retiring a dd-wrt router?! For shame!

                        Hardware limitation of current router, no DDwrt fault.

                        Ok, so gets yourself a new and better router that can handle dd-wrt. WNDR4000 works great for this. Netgear N750.

                        I think he's looking for more business class OS and hardware. Netgear N750 is just upper end consumer gear, not even a ProSafe (entry level business class.) DD-WRT is only for low end embedded devices, not serious hardware.

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                          thanksajdotcom @scottalanmiller
                          last edited by

                          @scottalanmiller said:

                          @ajstringham said:

                          @Bill-Kindle said:

                          @ajstringham said:

                          @Bill-Kindle Why are you retiring a dd-wrt router?! For shame!

                          Hardware limitation of current router, no DDwrt fault.

                          Ok, so gets yourself a new and better router that can handle dd-wrt. WNDR4000 works great for this. Netgear N750.

                          I think he's looking for more business class OS and hardware. Netgear N750 is just upper end consumer gear, not even a ProSafe (entry level business class.) DD-WRT is only for low end embedded devices, not serious hardware.

                          I've taken that kind of hardware and made rock solid devices before. The hardware isn't bad. The firmware they load is and it cripples them most times.

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                            scottalanmiller
                            last edited by

                            No matter what you load on that hardware, it can't, for example, push 300Mb/s. It just lacks the "oomph." With a lot of modern cable and fiber connections, traditional firewall hardware struggles to keep up. Add in UTM features and it really gets to be problematic.

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                              Bill Kindle @scottalanmiller
                              last edited by

                              @scottalanmiller The problem is that I still have a WRT54G :). Not the old school antenna one either, this is the UFO model. My main problem is that it lacks enough flash memory to really do anything with it. Pfsense is going to get me a close as I can get for now to anything that is used in a commercial setting.

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                                afalcon
                                last edited by

                                Haven't used BSD since my days at Data General. DG/UX was a hybrid, BSD for the file system (faster and more robust), networking used streams from ATT Sys V. I have now dated myself.

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