> > Then my configuration is not minimal I'd say :-)
> > Thanks.
>
> so make use of it's huge power. first make gateway, then add squid at
> least. possibly mail etc.
A question out of subject:
Do I need to install in such conditions: a network composed of one
gateway and two other nodes at maximum
You will be pleasantly surprised to find out that with adequate cooling
and a good quality power supply, most standard PCs can go on for ages
without a single problem, no shutdowns, no reboots. A UPS is also
such low end (by today standards) machine is actually better. it rarely
overheats.
___
One other question -a bit silly:
If I use that configuration as the gateway, can it be left on and
working 24x7? I mean, regarding the _hardware_, how often does it need
to be powered off: once a day, once a week, ... to prevent hardware
failures such as HDD crash?
actually disks feel better whe
Then my configuration is not minimal I'd say :-)
Thanks.
so make use of it's huge power. first make gateway, then add squid at
least. possibly mail etc.
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebs
(cheap) PC to act as the gateway. The hardware specification is
CPU: Pentium II at 433MHz
RAM: 128MB
HDD: IDE 4GB
LAN Card: D-Link 538FE
Internet connection is a slow one below 512Kbps and there is only one
other node than the gateway in the network.
Is the configuration enough?
for pure gatew
Thank you all! Very surprising! I didn't know that.
Bahman
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions
To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
On Wed, Aug 22, 2007 at 04:07:42PM +0330, Bahman M. wrote:
> One other question -a bit silly:
> If I use that configuration as the gateway, can it be left on and
> working 24x7? I mean, regarding the _hardware_, how often does it need
> to be powered off: once a day, once a week, ... to prevent ha
On Wed, Aug 22, 2007 at 04:07:42PM +0330, Bahman M. wrote:
> One other question -a bit silly:
> If I use that configuration as the gateway, can it be left on and
> working 24x7? I mean, regarding the _hardware_, how often does it need
> to be powered off: once a day, once a week, ... to prevent har
Bahman M. wrote:
> One other question -a bit silly:
> If I use that configuration as the gateway, can it be left on and
> working 24x7? I mean, regarding the _hardware_, how often does it need
> to be powered off: once a day, once a week, ... to prevent hardware
> failures such as HDD crash?
>
>
One other question -a bit silly:
If I use that configuration as the gateway, can it be left on and
working 24x7? I mean, regarding the _hardware_, how often does it need
to be powered off: once a day, once a week, ... to prevent hardware
failures such as HDD crash?
Bahman
On 8/21/07, Bahman M. <[
> Note: You need two LAN cards: One for the outside connection and one
> to your internal network. (You probably already know that, but since you
> referred to 'LAN Card' in the singular I thought I should mention it
> anyway.)
>
Yes, the machine has 2 D-Link cards.
> More than enough.
>
> I use
On Tue, Aug 21, 2007 at 01:32:28PM +0330, Bahman M. wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'd like to setup a small home network therefore I plan to buy an old
> (cheap) PC to act as the gateway. The hardware specification is
> CPU: Pentium II at 433MHz
> RAM: 128MB
> HDD: IDE 4GB
> LAN Card: D-Link 538FE
Note: Y
Hi all,
I'd like to setup a small home network therefore I plan to buy an old
(cheap) PC to act as the gateway. The hardware specification is
CPU: Pentium II at 433MHz
RAM: 128MB
HDD: IDE 4GB
LAN Card: D-Link 538FE
Internet connection is a slow one below 512Kbps and there is only one
other node t
13 matches
Mail list logo