%% William Ballard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: wb> OpenBSD makes a smokin firewall. One floppy, an old P90 laptop w/ wb> 90MB of ram, a few questions, a few lines of pf.conf, and I wb> haven't touched it in a year. Absolutely rock solid. It makes wb> Linux look absolutely amateur for that sort of thing.
I don't know why you say that. My gateway/firewall runs Debian stable, completely headless. I don't even have a terminal hooked to the serial port, that's how little I need a console. It's a P100 with 32M of RAM, and two 10/100 NIC cards. It also has my printer hooked up to the parallel port. It has in the past had a wireless card in it but currently does not. Runs full firewall/gateway, dnsmasq for DHCP for my local LAN, plus Samba for printing and file sharing between my wife's XP laptop and my kids' XP minitower, and my Linux workstation, and whatever other hardware guests etc. bring in. I installed it over THREE YEARS ago and I haven't needed to touch it since, other than for software updates, for which I've always been able to use SSH / apt-get dist-upgrade. If I didn't turn it off whenever we went on vacation for a week or more, it would have an uptime of three years: it's literally never choked once during normal processing. OpenBSD is great, no question. But Debian GNU/Linux should by no means be categorized as amateur, IMO. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Paul D. Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> HASMAT--HA Software Mthds & Tools "Please remain calm...I may be mad, but I am a professional." --Mad Scientist ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- These are my opinions--Nortel takes no responsibility for them. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]