lol, pics or it didn't happen?I also improvised a ghetto cooling solution using a piece of think plywood and a squirrel cage fan. Works surprisingly well.
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lol, pics or it didn't happen?I also improvised a ghetto cooling solution using a piece of think plywood and a squirrel cage fan. Works surprisingly well.
Thank you! I couldn't picture where the plywood came in, lol. Yes, this is an awesome cooler.
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I run virtualized OPNsense on a CWWK mini PC (6x i226-V NICs) with i5-1235U, 64GB DDR4-3200 and a 2TB TeamGroup Z440 NVME. Host is Proxmox and I do IOMMU passthrough on two of the NICs for my WAN/LAN to the OPNsense VM. The routing speed on this thing is insane while simultaneously running lots of other things on VMs/LXCs. You could easily do line rate 2.5GbE (I'm stuck with Comcast at 1.3Gbps download and very mediocre upload). My core switch is a Netgear MS510TXUP- 10GbE to desktop/NAS and 2.5GbE to POE APs.
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This was the first time I've virtualized my firewall, and I'm doing it from now on. Migrating my OPNsense config to it was as simple as exporting the existing config from a bare metal instance, and doing a find/replace on the interface names in the file. Imported the config and I was up and flying. Watching ServeTheHome YouTube videos got me interested in these types of mini PCs and they are flat out amazing for the cost and low power usage. And having 4-6 independent LAN ports you can individually hardware passthrough to VMs/LXCs is wild. I have Proxmox Backup Server setup on another physical machine so I'm prepared if this ever goes down for whatever reason but I think it should last.
Better than X58 no doubt, but it's also about putting old hardware to use with zero cost rather than e-waste and I have enough tasks to give it to justify the power draw. Adding AI training is not something you can do on a mini and I currently run the z690 system 24x7 already doing that in the background in addition to the X58 system so putting them all on one system will be a 50% reduction in power. AI training is 100% 3060 GPU, very little CPU, it will be a nice add with the system tasks using the UHD770 GPU as well.so many better systems but I know most of the world pays way lower prices for power. My home lab including networking gear only draws 150 watts under load and I am scheming to reduce this but another 50watts or so
Plenty of things could replace this ancient box. Anything with 2 Intel GB ethernet would be fine. Something like the cheap mini PCs on amazon for 100-150$For my 100 Mbit/s up/down internet connection, I'm running OPNsense on a fanless, 1-core, 1.2 GHz Via C7 board (Jetway J7F5M) . It's got a single 1 GiB RAM stick and an 80 GB Intel DC SSD (S3500?). I bought the board dec 2007. For the WAN side it's got a 100BASE-TX 3Com PCI (not PCIe) card. It's been amazingly stable over the years; I cannot recall a single crash. I did go through a few external brick power supplies - I think I replaced them three times and they all failed within a couple of years - before I got a MeanWell HRP-100 12 VDC supply and mounted it in an aluminium box. Oh, and the internal 12 VDC->ATX conversion board failed some years ago and needed a recapping (still running it now).
I get full 100 Mbit/s line speed though the thing. I'm not running any VPN, packet inspection or any outside-facing services on it though. But I do have some virtual VLAN devices, port forwardings and such set up. The web interface isn't exactly snappy but fully usable.
I'm thinking about replacing it with a Supermicro A1SAi-2550F board with 16 GiB of ECC RAM I have lying around, but...
Finally got the Intel X550-T2 and Intel X710-DA2 NICs in and installed and got some time to install opnsense 24.1. Using a ZFS mirror on the 960g SSDs. Just have to configure the interfaces then i think im ready to upload my cfg. Still throwing around the idea of disabling cores.
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20g routing with NGFW features enabled. This is an effort to reduce power draw from my current Dell R620 that is currently my router.Sounds like overkill for an OPNSense box.
Because i like to go fast. I have a 48 port 10g switch, all of my servers have 10g.What's your use case for 10G
It came with them. I took them out in effort to switch from SATA 960GB SSDs to 400GB SAS12 SSDs but dell used stupid star screws and it was easier to just put them back in then go get my ifixit kit and take them out. Why SSD? Higher reliability with less power draw. Why mirror? Because i ran a single ssd previously and it failed. If one dies now with the mirror i can put a new drive in and off we go with the rebuild.and 960G mirrored SSD's?