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    pfSense on Supermicro X10SLM-F

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General pfSense Questions
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    • C
      Cannondale @stephenw10
      last edited by

      @stephenw10 said in pfSense on Supermicro X10SLM-F:

      That Haswell Xeon could likely do all of it at the cost of power consumption. You probably don't need that sort of power.

      Thanks for your feedback Steve! I do understand the power consumption angle.
      There is a possibility of adding VPN to the network at some point in the near future so having a bit more horse power now feels better then just enough!
      The Supermicro server board I'm considering can be had for ~$100. Adding a PSU and rack case and a spare SSD, I'm thinking the project would cost less then $400. If a component (memory, cpu, ssd, fan) goes bad, I can swap it out.

      Besides the pfSense Documentation on netgate, is there other required reading that you could point me to?

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      • stephenw10S
        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
        last edited by

        You can also check our Youtube channel for the hangouts archive: https://www.youtube.com/c/netgateofficial
        Or the regularly updated Larence Systems channel is also very good: https://www.youtube.com/@LAWRENCESYSTEMS

        Steve

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          Billy_C
          last edited by

          Building stuff is fun but there are a lot of SFF prebuilt PCs out there to get you something better for less. It might still scratch the itch for tinkering because most likely you'd have to get a network card and maybe SSD. The 7th and 8th gen intel core SFF prebuilt PCs are pretty cheap right now. Another benefit with an OEM style prebuilt is most are completely tool-less so you can service it very easily if necessary.

          As far as compatibility, I wouldn't see why that wouldn't work but with older hardware there can always be some figuring out to do. As far as performance and power consumption, I don't really have any idea because most of my PFsense setups are pretty vanilla with some OpenVPN just to access files when I'm away.

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            Cannondale @stephenw10
            last edited by

            @stephenw10 said in pfSense on Supermicro X10SLM-F:

            You can also check our Youtube channel for the hangouts archive: https://www.youtube.com/c/netgateofficial
            Or the regularly updated Larence Systems channel is also very good: https://www.youtube.com/@LAWRENCESYSTEMS

            Thanks Steve! Very helpful!

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            • C
              Cannondale @Billy_C
              last edited by

              @billy_c said in pfSense on Supermicro X10SLM-F:

              SFF prebuilt PCs out there to get you something better for less.

              Thanks for the information Billy. I have looked at some Dell SFF PC for this task. As you mentioned, I would need to add a network card (possibly a EXPI9404VT) to the box. The question in my mind would be how long an inexpensive prebuilt PC could run 7x24?

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                Billy_C @Cannondale
                last edited by

                @cannondale Not sure, I have one that's going on 3 years and another that's only a year but seems to be fine. Both HPs.

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                  Cannondale @Billy_C
                  last edited by

                  @billy_c said in pfSense on Supermicro X10SLM-F:

                  Both HPs.

                  What HP models are you running?

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                    Billy_C @Cannondale
                    last edited by

                    @cannondale I can’t remember and I’m not at either location at the moment. Maybe something like HP ProDesk???

                    I don’t want to discourage you from building your own ground up or getting a mini but just throwing other options out there.

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                      Billy_C @Cannondale
                      last edited by

                      @cannondale I should also add that I’m running two supermicro based systems that were new when build. One is going on a few years and other is probably going on 4 years. One is running in a business environment with near 100% up-time, more than I can say for some of the other network gear in that setup. Supermicro has some rock solid setups for sure.

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                        Cannondale @Billy_C
                        last edited by

                        @billy_c

                        Thanks for the additional information Billy! It's all helpful.

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