Niki Kovacs ha scritto: > Hi, > > Last week I finished installing a small network in a private school : > one server (an old IBM X225), seventeen desktops (Fujitsu Siemens PIV > 2.4 GHZ, 512 MB RAM, 40 GB HD), all running CentOS 5.5. > > One extra machine is acting as a router, in that it is installed between > the DSL modem and the network, with two Ethernet cards, and it's taking > care of DHCP, DNS, NTP and also acts like a proxy (with Squid). It seems > quite big and noisy and electricity-consuming to me, so I wonder if > there is any small device that could possibly do the job as good, but > which would me more adapted : small, solid and cheap (if possible). I > imagine some tiny box just with a CPU and a small harddisk, a little RAM > and two network interfaces (one out, one in), where I could install a > very stripped-down CentOS, and then just forget about it. > > So far, I've googled a bit, and I've found two things: 1) Pyramid > Soekris boards, where I can put something like Pyramid Linux on it. And > 2) The Linksys WRT54GL, for which there are Linux firmwares like OpenWRT > and DD-WRT. > > Is there anything you could especially recommend for this job? (I'm not > afraid of getting my hands dirty, BTW :oD) > > Cheers, > > Niki > _______________________________________________ Hi Niki, I would like to suggest the Tp-Link TL-WR1043ND; it could be a little more expensive than the Linksys, but it has a more powerful cpu, more ram and an usb port (and more or less same power consumption) for around 50 Euros. I'm using it with the original firmware, and I tested OpenWRT on it; next I will try endian, but I have to say that I'm very satisfied with it and I would recomend it: the system is fast and responsive, and the usb port adds really a lot of flexibility (eg. file sharing, usb dongle backup, squid with cache and so on...). HTH Regards Lorenzo