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    What do you guys think of this hardware?

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    • M
      mricecool
      last edited by

      I found this thread: https://forum.pfsense.org/index.php?topic=129393.0 talking about the same subject. And a few performance specs from gig net with openvpn. Just for reference.

      I usually go for NC364T Quad-Port nics, but this build I'm going to try out the i340-t2 or i340-t4 to be redundant.

      So this build got a little out of hand regarding price. Im currently looking at this setup. Please review:

      CPU: i3-7350k, 180USD
      Motherboard: Supermicro X11SSL-F Socket lga1151, 255USD
      Case: Supermicro CSE-512L-260B Chassis with 260W power supply and some fans, 111USD
      CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-L9i, 50USD
      Memory: Kingston ValueRAM Server Premier KVR24SE17S8/4MB 4GB, 75USD
      HDD: KingFast F6 32GB 2.5" SATA SATA III MLC SSD, 25USD
      Extra Quad nic: i350-T4, 45USD

      180+255+111+50+75+25+45 = 741 USD

      This will be a future proof router.

      Any thoughts? =)

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      • P
        pfBasic Banned
        last edited by

        Personally I would skip the supermicro stuff on a home router and cut the price in half,  but if you want to spend the cash then goo for it!

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        • M
          mricecool
          last edited by

          @pfBasic:

          Personally I would skip the supermicro stuff on a home router and cut the price in half,  but if you want to spend the cash then goo for it!

          I figure that this machine will be on 24/7 and it will be an "investment" to buy server grade hardware to avoid complications in the future?

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          • ?
            Guest
            last edited by

            I figure that this machine will be on 24/7 and it will be an "investment" to buy server grade hardware to avoid complications in the future?

            Supermicro C2758 Board  ~500 Euros
            Supermicro SYS-E300-8D ~800 Euros
            Supermicro SYS-E200-8D ~900 Euros

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            • P
              pfBasic Banned
              last edited by

              Again totally personal choice but I think consumer will work fine for many years.

              My pfsense box was a lease SFF work station that is about 6 years old now and work fine.

              Many others on here are using much much older consumer grade hardware.

              Honestly pfsense is probably one of the most gentle applications you could use a computer for.

              It will almost never cycle power and will spend the majority of it's life at very reasonable temps.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • A
                Ashmodai6
                last edited by

                After a lot of hesitation I ordered today what I think is close to the best bang for the buck

                Intel Pentium G4560, 2x 3.50 GHz
                Motherboard Gigabyte GA-B250M-DS3H
                SSD SanDisk X400 256 Go M.2 SATA 6 Gbit/s
                8 GB DDR4 2133 CL15 Crucial (2x4GB)
                Case Inter-Tech GM-6013
                Intel i350T4
                Antes psu 350W (I had it already)

                Total around 375 usd delivered and performance not far from a i3 7350k (around 20% less for around 70% cheaper)
                I personally don't need more than 100mb for openvpn

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • P
                  pfBasic Banned
                  last edited by

                  @Ashmodai6:

                  After a lot of hesitation I ordered today what I think is close to the best bang for the buck

                  Intel Pentium G4560, 2x 3.50 GHz
                  Motherboard Gigabyte GA-B250M-DS3H
                  SSD SanDisk X400 256 Go M.2 SATA 6 Gbit/s
                  8 GB DDR4 2133 CL15 Crucial (2x4GB)
                  Case Inter-Tech GM-6013
                  Intel i350T4
                  Antes psu 350W (I had it already)

                  Total around 375 usd delivered and performance not far from a i3 7350k (around 20% less for around 70% cheaper)
                  I personally don't need more than 100mb for openvpn

                  Solid build, it won't break a sweat @ 100Mbps and will do great with IDS/IPS! Enjoy.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • M
                    mricecool
                    last edited by

                    @Ashmodai6:

                    After a lot of hesitation I ordered today what I think is close to the best bang for the buck

                    Intel Pentium G4560, 2x 3.50 GHz
                    Motherboard Gigabyte GA-B250M-DS3H
                    SSD SanDisk X400 256 Go M.2 SATA 6 Gbit/s
                    8 GB DDR4 2133 CL15 Crucial (2x4GB)
                    Case Inter-Tech GM-6013
                    Intel i350T4
                    Antes psu 350W (I had it already)

                    Total around 375 usd delivered and performance not far from a i3 7350k (around 20% less for around 70% cheaper)
                    I personally don't need more than 100mb for openvpn

                    That cpu seems like a good option to the i3 7250k.

                    One thing that I noticed in the comparison (https://ark.intel.com/compare/97527,97143) is the ECC memory support. The i3 does not support it, but the G4560 does.

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                    • P
                      pfBasic Banned
                      last edited by

                      I3 has hyoerthreading though

                      Ecc is usually totally unnecessary in pfsense home use  unless your mono requires it

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                      • M
                        mricecool
                        last edited by

                        @pfBasic:

                        I3 has hyoerthreading though

                        Ecc is usually totally unnecessary in pfsense home use  unless your mono requires it

                        Okey, good to know!

                        But both of them has hyper threading?

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                        • P
                          pfBasic Banned
                          last edited by

                          I'm sorry you're right, I was thinking Celeron!

                          If you want max openvpn performance the extra 600MHz on the 7350k will show.

                          If you are ok with a compromise then the Pentium is an excellent choice.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • A
                            Ashmodai6
                            last edited by

                            @pfBasic:

                            @Ashmodai6:

                            After a lot of hesitation I ordered today what I think is close to the best bang for the buck

                            Intel Pentium G4560, 2x 3.50 GHz
                            Motherboard Gigabyte GA-B250M-DS3H
                            SSD SanDisk X400 256 Go M.2 SATA 6 Gbit/s
                            8 GB DDR4 2133 CL15 Crucial (2x4GB)
                            Case Inter-Tech GM-6013
                            Intel i350T4
                            Antes psu 350W (I had it already)

                            Total around 375 usd delivered and performance not far from a i3 7350k (around 20% less for around 70% cheaper)
                            I personally don't need more than 100mb for openvpn

                            Solid build, it won't break a sweat @ 100Mbps and will do great with IDS/IPS! Enjoy.

                            Actually my connection is 500/50 so I hope it will be able to cope with this even if seating :-)
                            I was saying that for the openvpn part I don't care that much about high speed since I only use it to go around geofencing and I don't need so much speed the :-)

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • D
                              daveweinstein
                              last edited by

                              @mricecool:

                              I found this thread: https://forum.pfsense.org/index.php?topic=129393.0 talking about the same subject. And a few performance specs from gig net with openvpn. Just for reference.

                              I usually go for NC364T Quad-Port nics, but this build I'm going to try out the i340-t2 or i340-t4 to be redundant.

                              So this build got a little out of hand regarding price. Im currently looking at this setup. Please review:

                              CPU: i3-7350k, 180USD
                              Motherboard: Supermicro X11SSL-F Socket lga1151, 255USD
                              Case: Supermicro CSE-512L-260B Chassis with 260W power supply and some fans, 111USD
                              CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-L9i, 50USD
                              Memory: Kingston ValueRAM Server Premier KVR24SE17S8/4MB 4GB, 75USD
                              HDD: KingFast F6 32GB 2.5" SATA SATA III MLC SSD, 25USD
                              Extra Quad nic: i350-T4, 45USD

                              180+255+111+50+75+25+45 = 741 USD

                              This will be a future proof router.

                              Any thoughts? =)

                              How about this thing?

                              Lanner NCA-1031

                              Desktop Fanless x86 Network Appliance with Intel® Apollo Lake Processors

                              Key features:

                              • Intel® Atom™ x7-E3950 or x5-E3930 (Codenamed Apollo Lake)

                              • 6x or 5x GbE RJ45, 2x USB 3.0 Ports, 1x RJ45 Console Port

                              • 2x Pairs of Gen3 Bypass (SKU A&B)

                              • 1x DDR3L Non-ECC SO-DIMM (Max. 8GB)

                              • 1x Mini-PCIe Socket (SKU B&C)

                              • Fanless Desktop Form Factor

                              It seems very polished and appliance-like, and the x7-3950 can definitely do the job, but I haven't been able to find a price or online supplier.

                              -dw

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