Hardware for 1gbit/1gbit connection
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Hi everyone.
I am looking into using a pfsense box for traffic shaping/limiting/QoS on a 1gbit/1gbit connection.
It will be shaping the traffic for up to 250 ip´s.I got an dual cpu opteron 265 (1,8 ghz) in spare, but as I can read it will not be able to handle it.
I was thinking of using an Intel or Supermicro Motherboard with a Xeon E3-1245V2 and 8gb of ram.
Would that be able to handle it?
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we currently have 1Gbit connections to our pfsense boxes…
Supermicro 1U
Dual L5420 Xeon Cpu's (8 cores total between the 2 cpu's)
48G of ram
Intel Nic's built into the motherboard
we dont run QOS/IDS...
most of our links are at 80% utilization -
You could handle a 1Gbps connection with much lesser hardware though. Your original suggestion should do it easily.
Steve
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#1 thanks for the info.
That sounds like the E3-1245V2 should have no problem doing this.
#2 if my old hardware (1,8ghz) should be able to handle it how come this link says that I should use 3ghz?
http://www.pfsense.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=52&Itemid=49
"501+ Mbps - server class hardware with PCI-X or PCI-e network adapters. No less than 3.0 GHz CPU." -
#1 thanks for the info.
That sounds like the E3-1245V2 should have no problem doing this.
#2 if my old hardware (1,8ghz) should be able to handle it how come this link says that I should use 3ghz?
http://www.pfsense.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=52&Itemid=49
"501+ Mbps - server class hardware with PCI-X or PCI-e network adapters. No less than 3.0 GHz CPU."Your original suggestion should do it easily.
Intel or Supermicro Motherboard with a Xeon E3-1245V2 and 8gb of ram.
;)
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#4 thanks for writing that in bold for me :)
It must have been to early in the morning when I read the post ::)
It could actually be great if they did update the guidelines for 1gbit
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Ah, yes I should have made that clearer.
You can achieve 1Gbps throughput with even a low end Sandy Bridge CPU like the G530. Once you add traffic shaping you'd want something a bit more powerful though. The hardware guidelines are, unfortunately, out of date. I would guess that's based on a single core CPU.Steve
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#6
Thanks for clearing it up, I will use the E3-1245V2 for the project an see how much power is left when it is being hit by that amount of traffic :)