Pete Vickers
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | +47 48 17 91 00
Systemnet AS
On 20 Apr 2007, at 10:42 AM, Claudio Jeker wrote:
On Fri, Apr 20, 2007 at 09:48:44AM +0200, Toni Mueller wrote:
Hi Claudio,
On Fri, 06.04.2007 at 12:09:38 +0200, Claudio Jeker
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Even the most expensiv
On Fri, Apr 20, 2007 at 09:48:44AM +0200, Toni Mueller wrote:
> Hi Claudio,
>
> On Fri, 06.04.2007 at 12:09:38 +0200, Claudio Jeker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Even the most expensive Cisco/Foundry/Extreme switches have not the CPU
> > power to route or filter packets.
>
> how comes they boast
On 2007/04/20 09:48, Toni Mueller wrote:
> Hi Claudio,
>
> On Fri, 06.04.2007 at 12:09:38 +0200, Claudio Jeker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Even the most expensive Cisco/Foundry/Extreme switches have not the CPU
> > power to route or filter packets.
>
> how comes they boast running BGP and such
Hi Claudio,
On Fri, 06.04.2007 at 12:09:38 +0200, Claudio Jeker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Even the most expensive Cisco/Foundry/Extreme switches have not the CPU
> power to route or filter packets.
how comes they boast running BGP and such stuff? Eg. Cisco 6509 and up,
or Extreme Black Diamond
Claudio Jeker wrote:
On Fri, Apr 06, 2007 at 02:54:03AM -0600, rc wrote:
Let us know if you get this working. I would love to run OpenBSD on
my switches. PF running at wire speed would be beyond awesome.
Oh please. A managed switch is not even closely able to run PF especially
those cheapo
On Fri, Apr 06, 2007 at 10:56:11AM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I'd saw that everyone had running openbsd on a hp procurve 5300xl
> switch on this modul here.
> http://www.hp.com/rnd/accessories/J8162A_/accessory.htm
> but i don't know some details. it would be very interesting.
>
My company
On 4/6/07, Sam Fourman Jr. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 4/5/07, Steve Shockley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Siju George wrote:
> > I wish somebody would design a simple hardware that has 24 or more NIC
> > ports ( and of course WiFi ) and processor than can install OpenBSD.
> > With PF then I co
On Fri, Apr 06, 2007 at 02:54:03AM -0600, rc wrote:
> Let us know if you get this working. I would love to run OpenBSD on
> my switches. PF running at wire speed would be beyond awesome.
>
Oh please. A managed switch is not even closely able to run PF especially
those cheapo Linksys thingis wit
On 2007/04/06 10:26, RedShift wrote:
> RedShift wrote:
> >I've got this linksys SRW2016 managed 16 port gigabit switch at home.
> >The only problem with it, is that the firmware well eh, sucks. The
> >telnet interface can't configure everything (just basic setup, you can't
> >even set up SNMP or
I'd saw that everyone had running openbsd on a hp procurve 5300xl
switch on this modul here.
http://www.hp.com/rnd/accessories/J8162A_/accessory.htm
but i don't know some details. it would be very interesting.
Thomas
On Friday, 6. April 2007 09:14, you wrote:
> Diana is right. Newer switches use
Let us know if you get this working. I would love to run OpenBSD on
my switches. PF running at wire speed would be beyond awesome.
rc
On 4/6/07, RedShift <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
> On 4/5/07, Steve Shockley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Siju George wrote:
>> > I wish
RedShift wrote:
Hello all,
I've got this linksys SRW2016 managed 16 port gigabit switch at home.
The only problem with it, is that the firmware well eh, sucks. The
telnet interface can't configure everything (just basic setup, you can't
even set up SNMP or VLANs) and the webinterface only wor
Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
On 4/5/07, Steve Shockley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Siju George wrote:
> I wish somebody would design a simple hardware that has 24 or more NIC
> ports ( and of course WiFi ) and processor than can install OpenBSD.
> With PF then I could have a very inexpensive managed sw
Diana is right. Newer switches uses ASICs (Application Specific
Integrated Circuits) to do the switching. Making the MAC Address
lookup table basically hardwired into the hardware. That is why
switches are basically wire speed unlike a software bridge which is
slow in comparison.
Glenn, I woul
On 4/6/07, Douglas Allan Tutty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Thu, Apr 05, 2007 at 06:52:25PM +0200, Karl Sjvdahl - dunceor wrote:
> On 4/5/07, RedShift <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >I've got this linksys SRW2016 managed 16 port gigabit switch at home.
> >The only problem with it, is that the
On Thu, 5 Apr 2007, Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
I have been interested for quite some time in making a Switch with OpenBSD
See this post
http://archives.neohapsis.com/archives/openbsd/2007-03/2353.html
you may find this interesting
Sam Fourman Jr.
Sam, while I'm sure that was fun to setup I have t
On 4/5/07, Steve Shockley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Siju George wrote:
> I wish somebody would design a simple hardware that has 24 or more NIC
> ports ( and of course WiFi ) and processor than can install OpenBSD.
> With PF then I could have a very inexpensive managed switch with ACLS
> for all
Siju George wrote:
I wish somebody would design a simple hardware that has 24 or more NIC
ports ( and of course WiFi ) and processor than can install OpenBSD.
With PF then I could have a very inexpensive managed switch with ACLS
for all hosts on the network:-)
The problem isn't just getting lot
On Thu, Apr 05, 2007 at 06:52:25PM +0200, Karl Sjvdahl - dunceor wrote:
> On 4/5/07, RedShift <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >I've got this linksys SRW2016 managed 16 port gigabit switch at home.
> >The only problem with it, is that the firmware well eh, sucks. The
> >telnet interface can't confi
On 4/5/07, Karl Sjvdahl - dunceor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 4/5/07, RedShift <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I don't think the ARM 946 has a MMU which I'm pretty it needs to run
OpenBSD. So I think you are out of luck. Don't know if Linux runs on
systems without MMU but it's worth a try.
One o
On 4/5/07, RedShift <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hello all,
I've got this linksys SRW2016 managed 16 port gigabit switch at home.
The only problem with it, is that the firmware well eh, sucks. The
telnet interface can't configure everything (just basic setup, you can't
even set up SNMP or VLANs) a
Hello all,
I've got this linksys SRW2016 managed 16 port gigabit switch at home.
The only problem with it, is that the firmware well eh, sucks. The
telnet interface can't configure everything (just basic setup, you can't
even set up SNMP or VLANs) and the webinterface only works correctly
wit
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