Hi,
I'm hosting 150+ Mb/s relay for a while now: https://metrics.torproject.org/rs.html#details/333C874B532B3EA7E1A40980B7656...
I'm looking for new router for good price which can handle more connections and traffic ;-) Can you recommend any specific models? Should I avoid some products lines or companies?
It's possible to get something usable in range ~£100 for used one?
Is there evidence that the existing router is a bottleneck?
Matt
On 4/29/20 11:13, Secure Node wrote:
Hi,
I'm hosting 150+ Mb/s relay for a while now: https://metrics.torproject.org/rs.html#details/333C874B532B3EA7E1A40980B7656...
I'm looking for new router for good price which can handle more connections and traffic ;-) Can you recommend any specific models? Should I avoid some products lines or companies?
It's possible to get something usable in range ~£100 for used one? _______________________________________________ tor-relays mailing list tor-relays@lists.torproject.org https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays
On 29.04.2020 17:13, Secure Node wrote:
I'm looking for new router for good price which can handle more connections and traffic ;-) Can you recommend any specific models?
Ubiquiti EdgeOS -> Vyatta based -> debian based https://www.ui.com/products/#edgemax I have an ER-X & ER-8 and many airMAX AP flashed with openWRT (for Freifunk)
MikroTik RouterOS https://mikrotik.com/ I have an RB2011UiAS-RM & RB450Gx4 & mAP lite
PC Engines apu2 platform with Coreboot. Supported by almost all *BSD and Linux RouterOS ;-) https://www.pcengines.ch/alix.htm
Happy routing
On 2020-04-29 17:13:49, "Secure Node" admin@securenode.pl wrote:
I'm looking for new router for good price which can handle more connections and traffic ;-) Can you recommend any specific models? Should I avoid some products lines or companies?
If you have an old PC with 2 ethernet ports laying around or you can get one cheap I suggest you build your own: https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2016/04/the-ars-guide-to-building-a-linux-ro...
If you have an old PC with 2 ethernet ports laying around or you can get one cheap I suggest you build your own: https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2016/04/the-ars-guide-to-building-a-linux-ro...
Yes any old PC combined with opensource OS is great "router". Some find the two OS groups below simpler to understand and run than "Linux" due to having less layers of abstraction, have less moving parts due to being developed in one house, run on same platforms... PC small FF, embedded boxes, non forceful freedom copyright, etc... used to run big tor relays too!
https://www.freebsd.org/ https://www.nomadbsd.org/ https://www.furybsd.org/ https://www.ghostbsd.org/
Have fun.
On 30.04.2020 14:27, Logforme wrote:
On 2020-04-29 17:13:49, "Secure Node" admin@securenode.pl wrote:
If you have an old PC with 2 ethernet ports laying around or you can get one cheap I suggest you build your own: https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2016/04/the-ars-guide-to-building-a-linux-ro...
The *BSD and Linux based RouterOS list from my pcengines link is also valid for other hardware. Vyatta under Commercial is now open source. (vyos.io)
tor-relays@lists.torproject.org