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    Pfsense custom build help $450 budget from ($200)

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    • I
      iGamer
      last edited by

      @stephenw10:

      @lweddin1:

      if you had to pick between the two boards what one would you pick? Between the two its about a $30 price difference. How much bandwidth do you think the Atom C2758 or Atom F2758 can handle?

      There's not much in it. I guess if you have a space requirement go for the mini-ITX.

      It can handle a lot of bandwidth. >1Gb/s of firewall/NAT. >1Gbps of VPN once Quick Assist is enabled by all accounts. These Atom CPUs are nothing like Atoms of old.

      Steve

      Wait these newer Atoms can handle 1GB NAT WAN to LAN???/ hmmmm…

      AMD FX-835 || 16GB HyperX DDR3 || 240GB Kingston V300 SSD || 1TB Seagate Barracuda || Zotac Geforce GTX 980 Amp! Ed. ||  27" Samsung LCD.

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      • K
        kroberts
        last edited by

        Read up on your motherboard to be sure you can install only 4gb RAM. Go to the manufacturer website, nowhere else. I got a supermicro c2758 board and while I wasn't shopping for 4gb ram I also don't think I saw it in the list of compatible configurations. You need 2 sticks for most of these boards. I got 2x8gb sticks for mine so I can upgrade to 32 if performance is good enough for extra VMs.

        The rest of you, go read intel's documentation for these rangely c2*58 chips. They are intended to replace i7s and even e-series chips for router, firewall and vpn duty.

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        • S
          switchman
          last edited by

          Biggest difference I see is the memory type supported and the input power options.  If you are going with one of these boards, I would go with the same one used by the pfSense team in there store.  I'm not sure, but I would guess it is probably the A1SRi-2758F.

          You could purchase it in a cbare bones config with case and power if you wanted to up your budget.

          http://www.supermicro.com/products/system/1u/5018/sys-5018a-ftn4.cfm

          http://www.amazon.com/Supermicro-Rackmount-Barebone-Components-SYS-5018A-FTN4/dp/B00G3ED7D4/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1423114535&sr=8-1&keywords=SYS-5018A-FTN4

          or

          http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16816101837&nm_mc=KNC-GoogleAdwords-PC&cm_mmc=KNC-GoogleAdwords-PC--pla--Server+Barebones-_-N82E16816101837&gclid=CPH49vuJysMCFQYJaQodLm4AWw&gclsrc=aw.ds

          A1SRi-2758F
          http://www.supermicro.com/products/motherboard/atom/x10/a1sri-2758f.cfm

          Key Features
          1. Intel® Atom processor C2758, SoC,
              FCBGA 1283, 20W 8-Core
          2. Up to 64GB DDR3 1600MHz ECC
              SO-DIMM in 4 DIMM sockets

          3. Quad GbE LAN ports
          4. IPMI with dedicated LAN
          5. 2x SATA3 and 4x SATA2 ports
          6. 1x PCI-E 2.0 x8 slot
          7. 4x USB 3.0 (2 rear, 1 via header,
              1 Type A), 2x USB 2.0 ports (rear)
          8. 12V DC or ATX Power input
          9. Operating Temperature: 0°C - 60°C
          10. 7-Year product life

          A1SRM-2758F
          http://www.supermicro.com/products/motherboard/Atom/X10/A1SRM-2758F.cfm

          Key Features
          1. Intel® Atom processor C2758, SoC,
              FCBGA 1283, 20W 8-Core
          2. Up to 64GB DDR3 1600MHz ECC or
              non-ECC UDIMM in 4 DIMM sockets

          3. Quad GbE LAN ports
          4. IPMI with dedicated LAN
          5. 2x SATA3 and 4x SATA2 ports
          6. 1x PCI-E 2.0 x8, 1x PCI-E 2.0 x4
          7. 7x USB 2.0 ports
          8. Operating Temperature: 0°C - 60°C
          9. 7-Year product life

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          • L
            lweddin1
            last edited by

            @switchman:

            Biggest difference I see is the memory type supported and the input power options.  If you are going with one of these boards, I would go with the same one used by the pfSense team in there store.  I'm not sure, but I would guess it is probably the A1SRi-2758F

            A1SRi-2758F
            http://www.supermicro.com/products/motherboard/atom/x10/a1sri-2758f.cfm

            Key Features
            1. Intel® Atom processor C2758, SoC,
                FCBGA 1283, 20W 8-Core
            2. Up to 64GB DDR3 1600MHz ECC
                SO-DIMM in 4 DIMM sockets

            3. Quad GbE LAN ports
            4. IPMI with dedicated LAN
            5. 2x SATA3 and 4x SATA2 ports
            6. 1x PCI-E 2.0 x8 slot
            7. 4x USB 3.0 (2 rear, 1 via header,
                1 Type A), 2x USB 2.0 ports (rear)
            8. 12V DC or ATX Power input
            9. Operating Temperature: 0°C - 60°C
            10. 7-Year product life

            A1SRM-2758F
            http://www.supermicro.com/products/motherboard/Atom/X10/A1SRM-2758F.cfm

            Key Features
            1. Intel® Atom processor C2758, SoC,
                FCBGA 1283, 20W 8-Core
            2. Up to 64GB DDR3 1600MHz ECC or
                non-ECC UDIMM in 4 DIMM sockets

            3. Quad GbE LAN ports
            4. IPMI with dedicated LAN
            5. 2x SATA3 and 4x SATA2 ports
            6. 1x PCI-E 2.0 x8, 1x PCI-E 2.0 x4
            7. 7x USB 2.0 ports
            8. Operating Temperature: 0°C - 60°C
            9. 7-Year product life

            Motherboard

            I have decided to go with A1SRM-2758F - the reason being is that it holds two PCI slots and can use ECC or non ecc. I plan on using ECC

            http://www.supermicro.com/products/motherboard/Atom/X10/A1SRM-2758F.cfm

            Case

            http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16811108065

            or

            http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16811144139

            Hard Drive

            http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820167190

            Ram

            Not sure yet… this board can do ECC or Non-ECC
            I would like ECC.

            Network Card
            Not sure yet. I also want a wireless adapter since this board has two pic slots. Any ideas? I would also like an intel board.

            Looks like my build went from $200-450 now I am just not sure....

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            • S
              switchman
              last edited by

              You dont need a network card.  It has 4 Ethernet ports on it.  Me personally, I would use a router with DHCP turned off as a WAP.  Lot better control and feature set.  You can also upgrade it at a later date .  Use one of the ethernet ports WAN, 1 Lan and 1 connected to the WAP.  That leaves one free.

              If you wanted to save a little money, you could go with a 2558 board.  As a pure pfSense machine, it would probably serve you fine.

              http://www.amazon.com/Supermicro-Mini-A1SRI-2558F-O-Motherboard-Combo/dp/B00HS4NLHA/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1423115896&sr=8-1&keywords=A1SRi-2558F

              While it cost more, the 2758 is a stronger board.  If you possibly wanted to run VMs I would go with the 2758.

              That the problem with putting one of these together, feature creep and the associated cost.

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              • L
                lweddin1
                last edited by

                Any suggestions on ram?

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                • K
                  kejianshi
                  last edited by

                  "I have decided to go with A1SRM-2758F - the reason being is that it holds two PCI slots and can use ECC or non ecc. I plan on using ECC"

                  I'd bet the one that only uses ECC is actually going to be better. And since ECC is what you are buying, why bother with non-ecc compatibility?

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                  • S
                    switchman
                    last edited by

                    I agree, if you are going ECC anyway, go with the MBD-A1SRI-2758F-O.

                    Get a good mini-itx case.

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                    • L
                      lweddin1
                      last edited by

                      One is a mini-itx board and the other is micro atx. The Micro is only stated to use ECC and non ECC. It also has two pci slots.8x & 4X along with 7 USB ports 2.0 only

                      while the mini-its has usb 3.0 and can only use ECC and has 1 pic slot 8x

                      Mini-Itx
                      http://www.supermicro.com/products/motherboard/Atom/X10/A1SRi-2758F.cfm

                      Micro-Atx
                      http://www.supermicro.com/products/motherboard/Atom/X10/A1SRM-2758F.cfm

                      The A1SRI-2758F is DIFFERENT from the A1SRM-2758F

                      I just bought this on Amazon "I couldn't found it on Newegg….. Now I just need to find the ram I want along side a good wireless card. Please any suggestions on a card and ram???
                      http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00GO9E61K/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

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                      • K
                        kroberts
                        last edited by

                        I bought this one, which I don't think has been mentioned yet:  http://www.supermicro.com/products/motherboard/Atom/X10/A1SRM-LN7F-2758.cfm

                        The advantage is 7x Intel nics, 6 of which can be failover pairs.

                        The disadvantage is a single PCIe v2 4-lane slot.

                        I chose 16gb ecc registered memory as 2 8gb sticks, so I can upgrade to 16gb.  I intend to run pfSense as a VM and use the remaining CPU for other VMs.  If there is still available performance and not enough RAM I can double it without wasting money on these sticks.  Also according to my manual this board has a minimum configuration of 8gb in 2x 4gb sticks.

                        I also have an OCZ Vector 150 240gb ssd and a 500gb spinning rust drive.

                        Gotta say though, I more than doubled your "bigger" budget.  Not a lot of peripherals but they pack a punch right to your bank account.

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                        • L
                          lweddin1
                          last edited by

                          @kroberts:

                          I bought this one, which I don't think has been mentioned yet:  http://www.supermicro.com/products/motherboard/Atom/X10/A1SRM-LN7F-2758.cfm

                          The advantage is 7x Intel nics, 6 of which can be failover pairs.

                          The disadvantage is a single PCIe v2 4-lane slot.

                          I chose 16gb ecc registered memory as 2 8gb sticks, so I can upgrade to 16gb.  I intend to run pfSense as a VM and use the remaining CPU for other VMs.  If there is still available performance and not enough RAM I can double it without wasting money on these sticks.  Also according to my manual this board has a minimum configuration of 8gb in 2x 4gb sticks.

                          I also have an OCZ Vector 150 240gb ssd and a 500gb spinning rust drive.

                          Gotta say though, I more than doubled your "bigger" budget.  Not a lot of peripherals but they pack a punch right to your bank account.

                          Thats cool on " doubled: budget. I came into this project not knowing what cost would be. But anyways back to my topic I got my motherboard picked out now I just need to get some quality ram. Once I get everything I will post pictures & I am sure you will see me around asking the questions.

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                          • S
                            switchman
                            last edited by

                            Did you look at the tested Ram?
                            http://www.supermicro.com/products/motherboard/atom/x10/a1srm-2758f.cfm

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                            • K
                              kroberts
                              last edited by

                              @lweddin1,

                              You'll see me around asking questions too.  I started first but if your router project is in the fast lane you'll probably finish first.  I have lots of honey-do's and other projects that are keeping my c2758 in the 'assembled but no operating system' state.

                              @switchman,

                              More important than the tested RAM IMO is to look in the owner's manual and check the supported memory configurations.  As I said earlier, my board (not the OP's chosen board) supports a minimum of 8 gb.

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                              • S
                                switchman
                                last edited by

                                Agreed on looking at the manual.

                                I also like Crucial memory

                                http://www.crucial.com/usa/en/compatible-upgrade-for/Supermicro/a1srm-2758f

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                                • K
                                  kejianshi
                                  last edited by

                                  I'd love it if you could get mushkin ram.  Its never ever been flakey, finiky or failed me.  Alswys just works.  Not sure if they sell it for your box or not but I suspect yes.  They do server ram and do it well.

                                  (couldn't find any low profile ram with mushkin for that  )-:

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                                  • K
                                    kroberts
                                    last edited by

                                    One thing about my board is it takes standard sized sticks. And when I got it the ecc registered memory was only about $4 more per stick than non-ecc for 8g sticks. Which brings me to another idea.

                                    When I was shopping I noticed that there wasn't much difference between 4g and 8g sticks. I don't know exactly how fast the c2758 is but a 64g max memory and support for VT-x gives me hope that it will support not only a full pfSense install but also a few other VMs.

                                    If you have the cash and bigger sticks aren't much more than littler sticks you might consider going to more memory. It won't hurt anything to be sure.

                                    I don't have a favorite brand of memory but I do stick to the folks who have been doing it awhile and google for problems before buying a specific stick.

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                                    • L
                                      lweddin1
                                      last edited by

                                      @kroberts:

                                      One thing about my board is it takes standard sized sticks. And when I got it the ecc registered memory was only about $4 more per stick than non-ecc for 8g sticks. Which brings me to another idea.

                                      When I was shopping I noticed that there wasn't much difference between 4g and 8g sticks. I don't know exactly how fast the c2758 is but a 64g max memory and support for VT-x gives me hope that it will support not only a full pfSense install but also a few other VMs.

                                      If you have the cash and bigger sticks aren't much more than littler sticks you might consider going to more memory. It won't hurt anything to be sure.

                                      I don't have a favorite brand of memory but I do stick to the folks who have been doing it awhile and google for problems before buying a specific stick.

                                      I am just going to pick up found it on Amazon for cheaper. On newegg they are $187
                                      http://www.amazon.com/Kingston-2x8GB-10600-KVR1333D3E9SK2-16G/dp/B0064R7LH8#customerReviews

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                                      • M
                                        messerchmidt
                                        last edited by

                                        ecc on intel will be expensive. Probably past your budget point.

                                        cheaper on amd if you use am asus board, which tend to support ecc. They tend to use a bit more power, but will save you a lot.

                                        just add intel nics from ebay or such.

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                                        • L
                                          lweddin1
                                          last edited by

                                          I got my Motherboard and Case still waiting on the hard drive and the ram.

                                          I with with 16GB of ECC kingston
                                          http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=9SIA0ZX2C36260&cm_re=KVR1333D3E9SK2--20-139-979--Product

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                                          • K
                                            kroberts
                                            last edited by

                                            From amazon? I got my ssd and ram from amazon, more than $500 worth of hardware came in an envelope in my mailbox. I was a little bent.

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