On 11/12/2010 01:24 AM, Eugen Leitl wrote:
On Thu, Nov 11, 2010 at 05:41:00PM -0800, Leo Bicknell wrote:
I've run into a number of low end CPE situations lately where I haven't found anything that does what I want, but I have to believe it is out there. I'm hoping NANOG can help. An ALIX with pfSense 2.0 (BETA4 at the moment) would fit most of the above. IPv6 support is coming (is mostly there in the kernel, but interface only alpha).
PPPOE is currently broken in 2.0 BETA4. :(
If you want to run the snort package I'd however pick a Supermicro Atom system with 2 onboard NICs and add a dual-port Intel NIC, and run pfSense from a small SSD or an USB stick. Albeit a rackmount, the system would be quiet enough for SOHO.
Yes. I agree. Have SNORT run as a transparent bridge and have a separate management interface. Use vlans on that interface to handle whatever you need to do (dedicated vlan for snort, one for your management network, one for secure wifi, one for guest wifi etc).
Basically think about a sophisticated home user, or a 1-5 person small office. Think DSL, Cable Modem, maybe Cell Card or ISDN as backups. Looking for an "appliance", very much fire and forget. I probably won't get all the features that I want, but in no particular order:
- Able to deal with "backup" connectivity, eg. Cell Cards which you only want to use if the primary is down. - User friendly features, e.g. UPNP, NAT-PMP, etc. - Good manageability. ssh to a cli would be a huge bonus, at least the ability to backup a config. Very well supported. http(s) and ssh both.
Well the SSH interface is very limited. You can login and do some basic checks. However everything is driven from a single XML config file that gets parsed by PHP scripts during the init process and then writes out all the UNIX configuration files. However all the things I've ever done from the CLI on a Linux box are readily available from the pfSense web interface (arp table checks, traceroute,ping,iperf,tcpdump). I only use the CLI when I have broken something.
_ Nice firewall features.
- IDS features are cool.
It has a SNORT package that's pretty nice. Also has some other AV type stuff and a proxy. I haven't gotten the proxy/av to work yet, but haven't put much time into them.
WiFi is not strictly required, but would be cool. Things like "guest" WiFi would be an added bonus.
It supports a lot of wifi cards. I put a USB wifi stick in my pfsense box and configured it as an AP from the web UI. I'm running the current stable pfSense (1.2.3 I think). Very happy with it. It's a fully featured distribution that is incredibly well put together.