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    Shuttle DS57U (Broadwell & Dual Intel NICs)

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Hardware
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    • ?
      A Former User
      last edited by

      @foetus:

      Compared to this Shuttle which is going to retail around €230. Lets even make it €250. Drop in 8gig mem, 60/80 gig reliable SSD, half hour work to scrape off the Shuttle logo and loading image.. We're going to look at around €400.

      the shuttle is around 200 EURs atm in germany AND its already available, see here.

      i'm going to buy one next week.

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      • R
        RAND0M1ZER
        last edited by

        @gonzopancho:

        $217 (US) + 2 x $21 for 4GB ram, + call it $8 for a 4GB SD card.  $269

        This .vs http://store.netgate.com/ADI/RCC-DFF-2220.aspx at $275 which has:

        Why did you include 4GB of RAM to compare it to a 2GB system?

        I agree with JPS.pfsense that you are being dishonest in your comparison.

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        • J
          JPS.pfsense
          last edited by

          @hedsht:

          the shuttle is around 200 EURs atm in germany AND its already available

          i'm going to buy one next week.

          Please tell us about your experience. Is WLAN working, is it possible to install from a USB-Drive (my ZBOX made some problems), etc.

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          • ?
            A Former User
            last edited by

            @JPS.pfsense:

            @hedsht:

            the shuttle is around 200 EURs atm in germany AND its already available

            i'm going to buy one next week.

            Please tell us about your experience. Is WLAN working, is it possible to install from a USB-Drive (my ZBOX made some problems), etc.

            i'll, it should arrive tomorrow or on thursday.

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            • ?
              A Former User
              last edited by

              the shuttle has arrived and i'm happy with it.

              lspci -lv (Ubuntu 14.04)
              pciconf -lv (FreeBSD 10.1)

              Booting from USB works without any issues, even booting from SD Card works.

              Minor con's so far:

              • the NICs use two different drivers, one is igb0 (I211) and the other one em0 (I218LM)

              • no status LEDs on NICs, might bother some people

              • Wifi Card (RTL8188EE) is not working

              • it isnt possible to disable the igpu (it will use 64mb of ram)

              The case is made of metal which makes it quite hard to install external wifi antenna's, but i'll try to find a good spot, swap the wifi card and install two external antenna's.

              I've set PowerD to adaptive and while downloading 100mbit the cpu idle's at around 500 MHz.

              PfSense GUI Screenshot

              Power Usage: 11w (4 GB RAM & 64 GB SSD)

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              • ?
                A Former User
                last edited by

                Important thing to note: AES-NI doesnt seem to be supported by FreeBSD 10.1 on this Broadwell-CPU:

                
                [2.2-RELEASE][root@firewall.lan]/root: dmesg | grep -i aes
                aesni0: No AESNI support.
                
                [2.2-RELEASE][root@firewall.lan]/root: /usr/bin/openssl engine -t -c
                (cryptodev) BSD cryptodev engine
                 [RSA, DSA, DH]
                     [ available ]
                (rsax) RSAX engine support
                 [RSA]
                     [ available ]
                (rdrand) Intel RDRAND engine
                 [RAND]
                     [ available ]
                (dynamic) Dynamic engine loading support
                     [ unavailable ]
                
                

                Ubuntu 14.04

                root@ubuntu:~# cat /proc/cpuinfo
                processor       : 0
                vendor_id       : GenuineIntel
                cpu family      : 6
                model           : 61
                model name      : Intel(R) Celeron(R) 3205U @ 1.50GHz
                stepping        : 4
                microcode       : 0x13
                cpu MHz         : 500.000
                cache size      : 2048 KB
                physical id     : 0
                siblings        : 2
                core id         : 0
                cpu cores       : 2
                apicid          : 0
                initial apicid  : 0
                fpu             : yes
                fpu_exception   : yes
                cpuid level     : 20
                wp              : yes
                flags           : fpu vme de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic sep mtrr pge mca cmov pat pse36 clflush dts acpi mmx fxsr sse sse2 ss ht tm pbe syscall nx pdpe1gb rdtscp lm constant_tsc arch_perfmon pebs bts rep_good nopl xtopology nonstop_tsc aperfmperf eagerfpu pni pclmulqdq dtes64 monitor ds_cpl vmx est tm2 ssse3 cx16 xtpr pdcm pcid sse4_1 sse4_2 x2apic movbe popcnt tsc_deadline_timer xsave rdrand lahf_lm abm 3dnowprefetch ida arat epb xsaveopt pln pts dtherm tpr_shadow vnmi flexpriority ept vpid fsgsbase tsc_adjust erms invpcid rdseed
                bogomips        : 2993.17
                clflush size    : 64
                cache_alignment : 64
                address sizes   : 39 bits physical, 48 bits virtual
                power management:
                
                

                I've already chatted with the Intel-Support, they claim that the CPU itself does support AES-NI, but its up to the computer-manufacturer (shuttle) to implement it. i've contacted the shuttle support.

                :(

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                • ?
                  Guest
                  last edited by

                  BIOS issue, likely.

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                  • ?
                    Guest
                    last edited by

                    @RAND0M1ZER:

                    @gonzopancho:

                    $217 (US) + 2 x $21 for 4GB ram, + call it $8 for a 4GB SD card.  $269

                    This .vs http://store.netgate.com/ADI/RCC-DFF-2220.aspx at $275 which has:

                    Why did you include 4GB of RAM to compare it to a 2GB system?

                    I agree with JPS.pfsense that you are being dishonest in your comparison.

                    Because unless I'm mistaken, you can't run a single DIMM in that board.  If  I'm wrong, the Shuttle is at $248. I hope you get the AES-NI fixed.

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                    • ?
                      Guest
                      last edited by

                      Might I add that I have no less than three junk Shuttle cases that used custom power supplies. They make OK gear but 24/7 embedded class, I don't think so. Maybe you will get lucky and it will last. Shuttle makes nice gear, just not embedded specialty gear.

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                      • ?
                        Guest
                        last edited by

                        And how about goodies like an M.2 slot and SIM socket. Totally purpose built machinery.

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                        • J
                          JPS.pfsense
                          last edited by

                          @Phishfry:

                          Might I add that I have no less than three junk Shuttle cases that used custom power supplies. They make OK gear but 24/7 embedded class, I don't think so. Maybe you will get lucky and it will last. Shuttle makes nice gear, just not embedded specialty gear.

                          So the power supply was the reason for malfunction in all three cases?

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                          • ?
                            Guest
                            last edited by

                            One bad power supply and two bad motherboards. Different generations as well from G2 to K45. I really do like thier cases. This was my choice for htpc/geexbox along with Aopen slim boxes. I have had better luck with Aopen personally…

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                            • R
                              robi
                              last edited by

                              What's the max speed you can achieve NATting between the two interfaces, and with what CPU usage/load?

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                              • ?
                                A Former User
                                last edited by

                                i'm not using this one as a pfsense box anymore, because AES-NI is not supported.

                                had a really nice chat with the shuttle support and they confirmed that the celeron they used doesnt support AES-NI, its not a bios issue.
                                but, later this year shuttle will release a i3 & i5 version which will definitely support AES-NI.

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                                • S
                                  Shonky
                                  last edited by

                                  @hedsht:

                                  i'm not using this one as a pfsense box anymore, because AES-NI is not supported.

                                  had a really nice chat with the shuttle support and they confirmed that the celeron they used doesnt support AES-NI, its not a bios issue.
                                  but, later this year shuttle will release a i3 & i5 version which will definitely support AES-NI.

                                  That's not true according to Intel. Sounds like BS to me. I was about to go and buy one until hearing that…
                                  http://ark.intel.com/products/84809/Intel-Celeron-Processor-3205U-2M-Cache-1_50-GHz

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                                  • ?
                                    A Former User
                                    last edited by

                                    @Shonky:

                                    @hedsht:

                                    i'm not using this one as a pfsense box anymore, because AES-NI is not supported.

                                    had a really nice chat with the shuttle support and they confirmed that the celeron they used doesnt support AES-NI, its not a bios issue.
                                    but, later this year shuttle will release a i3 & i5 version which will definitely support AES-NI.

                                    That's not true according to Intel. Sounds like BS to me. I was about to go and buy one until hearing that…
                                    http://ark.intel.com/products/84809/Intel-Celeron-Processor-3205U-2M-Cache-1_50-GHz

                                    i've talked with the intel support as well, the celeron does support aes-ni, but its up to the manufacturer which version he uses and apparently shuttle took the one without aes-ni in this case.

                                    cpu.png
                                    cpu.png_thumb
                                    mobo.png
                                    mobo.png_thumb

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                                    • K
                                      kejianshi
                                      last edited by

                                      Was you CPU maxed out all the time?

                                      Just because AES acceleration isn't supported on chip doesn't mean the box can't do a good job depending on bandwidth you need supported.

                                      Not that this would be my go-to box to begin with but if I already had one, it would have to be incapable of doing the job for me to unplug it.

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                                      • S
                                        Shonky
                                        last edited by

                                        @hedsht:

                                        @Shonky:

                                        @hedsht:

                                        i'm not using this one as a pfsense box anymore, because AES-NI is not supported.

                                        had a really nice chat with the shuttle support and they confirmed that the celeron they used doesnt support AES-NI, its not a bios issue.
                                        but, later this year shuttle will release a i3 & i5 version which will definitely support AES-NI.

                                        That's not true according to Intel. Sounds like BS to me. I was about to go and buy one until hearing that…
                                        http://ark.intel.com/products/84809/Intel-Celeron-Processor-3205U-2M-Cache-1_50-GHz

                                        i've talked with the intel support as well, the celeron does support aes-ni, but its up to the manufacturer which version he uses and apparently shuttle took the one without aes-ni in this case.

                                        That doesn't really make sense. The model supports it. If there's a version that doesn't then well it's a different model surely.

                                        @kejianshi:

                                        Was you CPU maxed out all the time?

                                        Just because AES acceleration isn't supported on chip doesn't mean the box can't do a good job depending on bandwidth you need supported.

                                        Not that this would be my go-to box to begin with but if I already had one, it would have to be incapable of doing the job for me to unplug it.

                                        What don't you like about it?

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                                        • E
                                          edwardwong
                                          last edited by

                                          @JPS.pfsense:

                                          @gonzopancho:

                                          This .vs http://store.netgate.com/ADI/RCC-DFF-2220.aspx at $275 which has:

                                          • more clockrate (1.7GHz .vs 1.5GHz)

                                          Atom 1,7Ghz vs. Celeron 1,5GHz - this should be a clear win for the Celeron. It's ok to list advantages of your solution, but comparing the clock rate feels like cheating in that case.

                                          • less power consumption (TDP 6W .vs 15W

                                          €15 difference per year (24/7)

                                          • better Ethernets

                                          Can you explain the difference?

                                          • Shuttle is only spec-ed to 40C, 2220 is spec-ed to 65C

                                          The main advantage is, that the Shuttle system is available in Germany. Other solutions often have to be imported.

                                          Don't just look at the names, Intel C2350 is a member of Rangeley/Avoton (Silvermount series) which has server grade quality (The fastest C2750, octa-core Atom, was tested to be almost on par with previous generation 4C8T Xeon L5520, but TDP is just 1/3).
                                          Definitely both CPU can do 1Gbps NAT throughput, while C2350 has turbo frequency up to 2GHz to make it even faster.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • ?
                                            A Former User
                                            last edited by

                                            @Shonky:

                                            That doesn't really make sense. The model supports it. If there's a version that doesn't then well it's a different model surely.

                                            i can only say, what i've been told by the shuttle support. there isnt a bios setting to enable or disable AES-NI and i've tested FreeBSD 10.1, Ubuntu 14.04 and Windows 7 and none of them showed AES-NI Support.

                                            So its either disabled on this CPU (maybe to save power?) or my particular cpu doesnt support AES-NI.

                                            I went back to my D2500CC as a PfSense Firewall and am using the Shuttle DS57U as a Ubuntu Webserver for web development now.

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