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    Any MiniITX motherboard with C2718, C2518, C2508, C2358, C2308 CPU?

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    • W
      Wolf666
      last edited by

      C2XXX is the Intel SOC family, some Board Manufacturer simply do not offer (build) several MB-SOC combination, due to commercial / market reason. They limit the combination to those that their reference market can easily absorb.

      Modem Draytek Vigor 130
      pfSense 2.4 Supermicro A1SRi-2558 - 8GB ECC RAM - Intel S3500 SSD 80GB - M350 Case
      Switch Cisco SG350-10
      AP Netgear R7000 (Stock FW)
      HTPC Intel NUC5i3RYH
      NAS Synology DS1515+
      NAS Synology DS213+

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      • R
        robi
        last edited by

        I'm aware of all that.

        I just wonder if anyone has seen motherboards from other manufacturers equipped with C2718, C2518, C2508, C2358, C2308 CPUs.

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        • W
          Wolf666
          last edited by

          Take a look to: http://www.adiengineering.com/products/rcc-dff

          Modem Draytek Vigor 130
          pfSense 2.4 Supermicro A1SRi-2558 - 8GB ECC RAM - Intel S3500 SSD 80GB - M350 Case
          Switch Cisco SG350-10
          AP Netgear R7000 (Stock FW)
          HTPC Intel NUC5i3RYH
          NAS Synology DS1515+
          NAS Synology DS213+

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          • R
            robi
            last edited by

            I don't see them for sale anywhere…

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            • B
              bennyc
              last edited by

              rebranded (exclusive?) by Netgate, and also available in pfSense store as pfSense appliance…  ;)

              4x XG-7100 (2xHA), 1x SG-4860, 1x SG-2100
              1x PC Engines APU2C4, 1x PC Engines APU1C4

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              • R
                robi
                last edited by

                Unfortunately shipping costs of Netgate to Europe makes their products way too expensive for us.

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                • W
                  Wolf666
                  last edited by

                  @robi:

                  I don't see them for sale anywhere…

                  The 2508 one: http://store.netgate.com/ADI/RCC-DFF-KIT.aspx ….I think you can grab the 2358 http://store.netgate.com/ADI/RCC-VE-2440.aspx

                  Modem Draytek Vigor 130
                  pfSense 2.4 Supermicro A1SRi-2558 - 8GB ECC RAM - Intel S3500 SSD 80GB - M350 Case
                  Switch Cisco SG350-10
                  AP Netgear R7000 (Stock FW)
                  HTPC Intel NUC5i3RYH
                  NAS Synology DS1515+
                  NAS Synology DS213+

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • R
                    robi
                    last edited by

                    As I worte earlier, that's too expensive. $349 + $64 shipping = $413. And there's customs tax to be paid about $100, and I've got no warranty (in theory there is warranty, but in practice it's not really fesible due to high shipping costs and customs taxes)

                    I can get the original SuperMicro A1SRI-2558F board for about $369 here with local warranty, and I can get a quality case with gold PSU for about $45, add 4GB of ECC ram for about $50. And I can reimburse about 27% local VAT tax later out of this if I buy it as a company.

                    I don't need the power of C2558, I'd be fine with C2358 or even C2308, but I'd expect to pay less for it.

                    I was thinking about manufacturers like Asus, GigaByte, Asrock, MSI, Jetway - they all manufacture Mini-ITX motherboards, but I can'T seem to find any C2000 series CPU in any of their supply… not even in China.

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                    • M
                      messerchmidt
                      last edited by

                      get the supermicro 2758 for pfsense if your budget allows

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                      • R
                        robi
                        last edited by

                        Ok let's look at the question differently:

                        Is there any less expensive motherboard with any SOC supporting QuickAssist and AES-NI? What's the less expensive model these days?

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                        • ?
                          A Former User
                          last edited by

                          Asrock has the C2750 & C2550:

                          http://www.asrockrack.com/general/productdetail.asp?Model=C2550D4I

                          http://www.asrockrack.com/general/productdetail.asp?Model=C2750D4I

                          unfortunately they don't have quickassist, only aes-ni.

                          you might want to check this link, there're a couple of supermicro mainboards with the Intel Atom C2358 & Intel Atom C2558 & Intel Atom C2758.

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                          • A
                            antillie
                            last edited by

                            If you have the budget you absolutely cannot go wrong with the Supermicro A1SRI-2758F. Just keep in mind that it takes ECC memory.

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                            • E
                              edwardwong
                              last edited by

                              QuickAssist is quite new, and only Rangeley CPUs are offering this, I'm not sure how many software will support this.
                              AES-NI is only helping AES encryption but frankly speaking I guess most people use AES only for OpenVPN? So there should be benefit from it.

                              Anyway, I just got my Asrock C2550D4i a week before, but planning to use it on storage (data encryption, but I can still get performance boost by 50% with AES-NI)

                              @hedsht:

                              Asrock has the C2750 & C2550:

                              http://www.asrockrack.com/general/productdetail.asp?Model=C2550D4I

                              http://www.asrockrack.com/general/productdetail.asp?Model=C2750D4I

                              unfortunately they don't have quickassist, only aes-ni.

                              you might want to check this link, there're a couple of supermicro mainboards with the Intel Atom C2358 & Intel Atom C2558 & Intel Atom C2758.

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                              • A
                                antillie
                                last edited by

                                Given how fast AES is in pure software mode and how secure it is there is really no reason to use any other type of encryption unless you have a client device that is just terrible and doesn't support AES.

                                Most people that I work with just don't realize that AES is not only more secure than 3DES but it is also much much faster. In fact AES is generally faster than every other non terrible block cipher out there and offers either more or a reasonably equivalent level of security.

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                                • F
                                  foetus
                                  last edited by

                                  @robi:

                                  Ok let's look at the question differently:

                                  Is there any less expensive motherboard with any SOC supporting QuickAssist and AES-NI? What's the less expensive model these days?

                                  If you drop the QuickAssist requirement.

                                  http://www.shuttle.eu/products/slim/ds57u/specification/

                                  AES-NI, low power, rated for 24/7 use, passive, dual Intel NIC's.
                                  Should be slightly more powerful then a dual core Avaton/Rangeley.

                                  I have 2 in use right now. Funny title things. Stable thus far (200/10 lines, 2 IPSEC tunnels).

                                  You can find dual core versions on the Asian market. Just don't expect them to reach you for less then you pay for a C2558 Supermicro board in EU unless you order in bulk.

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                                  • K
                                    kroberts
                                    last edited by

                                    @antillie:

                                    ….
                                    Most people that I work with just don't realize that AES is not only more secure than 3DES but it is also much much faster. In fact AES is generally faster than every other non terrible block cipher out there and offers either more or a reasonably equivalent level of security.

                                    As long as you trust the NSA.

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                                    • A
                                      antillie
                                      last edited by

                                      @kroberts:

                                      As long as you trust the NSA.

                                      Except that AES was not designed by the NSA and has been very thoroughly tested by independent cryptography researchers.

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                                      • R
                                        robi
                                        last edited by

                                        @foetus:

                                        If you drop the QuickAssist requirement.

                                        http://www.shuttle.eu/products/slim/ds57u/specification/

                                        AES-NI, low power, rated for 24/7 use, passive, dual Intel NIC's.
                                        Should be slightly more powerful then a dual core Avaton/Rangeley.

                                        I have 2 in use right now. Funny title things. Stable thus far (200/10 lines, 2 IPSEC tunnels).

                                        Wow. The Shuttle DS57U seems interesting. Can you please post some bandwidth tests?
                                        What's the max speed you can achieve NATting between the two interfaces? I'd also be interested in OpenVPN bandwidth using AES-NI.

                                        Edit: seems that AES-NI is not working in this Shuttle box, see: https://forum.pfsense.org/index.php?topic=89148.msg497960#msg497960

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                                        • ?
                                          Guest
                                          last edited by

                                          Hi folks,

                                          at the Q4/2015 Soekris is bringing out the new net6801 with the C2758 - 8 Core - 8 GB
                                          if you could whait until it would be a great success, because for this box also a 19" case
                                          will be their but simple a desktop case also and on top you are able to use the soekris
                                          lan1841 quad port Intel based NIC to gain a higher port density.

                                          Supermicro was also showing up two new boards at the CeBit that will be launched in the
                                          next two month as I am  right informed, the Supermicro X10SDV-TLN4F and X10SDV-F.
                                          Based on the Intel Xeon D-1500 CPU!

                                          Likes ASRock also was showing up a new board based on the same Intel Xeon D-1500
                                          called ASRock Rack D1540D4X.

                                          Lanner is offering the FW-7525 with Intel QuickAssist and based on an Intel C2358.

                                          What ever you wish, is not in the Alix APU class as I see it right!
                                          So save your money and then buy a real good appliance that will fit
                                          your needs and is serving what you expect from!

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                                          • E
                                            edwardwong
                                            last edited by

                                            @BlueKobold:

                                            Hi folks,

                                            at the Q4/2015 Soekris is bringing out the new net6801 with the C2758 - 8 Core - 8 GB
                                            if you could whait until it would be a great success, because for this box also a 19" case
                                            will be their but simple a desktop case also and on top you are able to use the soekris
                                            lan1841 quad port Intel based NIC to gain a higher port density.

                                            Supermicro was also showing up two new boards at the CeBit that will be launched in the
                                            next two month as I am  right informed, the Supermicro X10SDV-TLN4F and X10SDV-F.
                                            Based on the Intel Xeon D-1500 CPU!

                                            Likes ASRock also was showing up a new board based on the same Intel Xeon D-1500
                                            called ASRock Rack D1540D4X.

                                            Lanner is offering the FW-7525 with Intel QuickAssist and based on an Intel C2358.

                                            What ever you wish, is not in the Alix APU class as I see it right!
                                            So save your money and then buy a real good appliance that will fit
                                            your needs and is serving what you expect from!

                                            Besides the D-1500 (Some review sites saying it could be selling at around US$900-1000), Supermicro already produced embedded i5/i7 mainboard, in terms of network appliance I believe they are more than enough.

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