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    What USB 3.0 NIC to get?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Wireless
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    • L
      lockheed
      last edited by

      I have a WRT54g wireless router running Tomato, but:

      • it is only 54Mbits
      • if I connect ISP's ethernet cable to my nettop, then I have no ethernet ports left
      • external AP requires additional power, thus additional clutter and power draw
      • I don't want to spend on a new AP more than on a decent USB 3.0 network card, and I don't know if I'd be able to get anything with at least 2x2 and ac or n capabilities for that price
      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • D
        doktornotor Banned
        last edited by

        Good luck. USB 3.0 + AC with FBSD is a sure recipe for complete failure.

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        • K
          kejianshi
          last edited by

          doktornotor is right - Your have a flaw in your thinking.  That is, there are no decent USB solutions.  None are "good".

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          • M
            mikeisfly
            last edited by

            Do your self a favor and forget the usb nic. But you will try it and then after hours, days, weeks, months trying to get help you will come to realize, what we have all have figured out a long time ago, stay away from usb nics. What you should get is a small little managed switch like a Cisco 2940 you can get from (http://www.ebay.com/itm/Cisco-Catalyst-WS-C2940-8TT-S-2940-8-Port-10-100-Ethernet-Switch-/251832203706?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item3aa25e79ba). Configure it so that one of the ports is your wan you will need to use VLANs for this and then configure the other ports for LAN, then as others have suggested get a wireless router/ access point (http://www.amazon.com/NETGEAR-AC750-Gigabit-Router-R6050/dp/B00KFD0O0I/ref=sr_1_7?ie=UTF8&qid=1425473025&sr=8-7&keywords=netgear+wireless+ac+router) and you will have a nice little setup. The extra power draw will be less than $5 a year depending on your electric rates but do the math. It is worth spending a little bit of money.

            If you need help configuring it just come back and there are plenty of people on here that would be more than happy to help, but trust me this would be your best solution. If you want to spend more money you can get a switch that has all gigabit ports not just the uplink port, but if your needs don't require it this should be a perfect solution for you.

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            • L
              lockheed
              last edited by

              Thanks for the suggestions. The power draw is not the only concern. It is also the space.

              As I mentioned, I do have this WRT54g router with Tomato on it which has quite advanced capabilities, including VLAN. Would it be possible to set it like so:

              ISP -> WRT54g -> pfSense box (running DHCP for internal VLAN?) -> back to WRT54g (using the same ethernet port (VLAN?)) -> WRT54g distributes Internet from pfSense box to other cable and wireless clients.

              Does it make sense?

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              • M
                mikeisfly
                last edited by

                You should be able to do that if you use tagged ports but the wrt54g is really slow in terms of wireless, but give it a try and see how you make out. I guess what you would do is put your internet connection on the wan port (vlan 2 untagged). Make ports 1 - 3 members of vlan 3 untagged. Make port 4 on your WRT a member of vlan 2 and 3 going to our PfSense. Create vlan 2 and 3 on your PfSense and assign your interface example em0 like so:

                WAN=em0_vlan2
                LAN=em0_vlan3

                You should be good to go. You might have to put the WRT in access point mode and make the LAN IP of the WRT in the same address space of your LAN on PfSense so that you can administer it, make sure you disable the DHCP because PfSense will be doing that duty.

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                • L
                  lockheed
                  last edited by

                  That's good to know. However, there is another layer of complication added by the fact pfSense will be running inside VM on the server box, using bridge with virtual VBox interfaces (no pci pass-through).

                  Now that I think about it, I'm afraid to go grey before I figure out how to configure it…

                  On a related note: do VLANs add any overheads? Will my connection speed/ping suffer because of their use?

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                  • L
                    lockheed
                    last edited by

                    Well, looks like this router has no VLAN tagging even with Tomato, so I guess that's the end of the road for this idea.

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                    • J
                      jaspras
                      last edited by

                      If you have wrt54g then change firmware to dd- wrt it has vlan tagging

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • L
                        lockheed
                        last edited by

                        @jaspras:

                        If you have wrt54g then change firmware to dd- wrt it has vlan tagging

                        Yes, tomato has it too. The problem is the hardware is not capable of it.

                        Anyway, I decommissioned it and am using pfSense in a VM on linux host with hostapd and it works well.

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