Digital Subscriber Line Looking for open-source home DSL gateway software & hardware to run it

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Subject Author Date
Looking for open-source home DSL gateway software & hardware to run it Al Dykes 11-01-07
Posted by Al Dykes on November 1, 2007, 10:38 am
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I feel the need for a new home dsl router coming on and I'm looking
for make and model sugggestions and ideas.

Cheap is good but an old PC has a big electric bill and is otherwise
uninteresting. I want an appliance. The box does NOT have to do WiFi.

I want a router that I can put some open-source software into that
gives me unix-ish network tools. The only open source I know of is
DD-WRT and that seems to be a WiFi system.

I've played with m0n0 and smoothwall and I would consider running either
if a sub-$100 dollar box can be identified that they run on.

I know that out-of-the box Linux can do this but I'd like to identify
a distro that gets me runnig quickly and lets some community look for
security problems and upgrades and can help, if needed.

Suggestions?




--
a d y k e s @ p a n i x . c o m
Don't blame me. I voted for Gore. A Proud signature since 2001

Posted by Doug McIntyre on November 1, 2007, 12:13 pm
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adykes@panix.com (Al Dykes) writes:
>I feel the need for a new home dsl router coming on and I'm looking
>for make and model sugggestions and ideas.

>Cheap is good but an old PC has a big electric bill and is otherwise
>uninteresting. I want an appliance. The box does NOT have to do WiFi.

>I want a router that I can put some open-source software into that
>gives me unix-ish network tools. The only open source I know of is
>DD-WRT and that seems to be a WiFi system.

OpenWRT is the more general one.

>I've played with m0n0 and smoothwall and I would consider running either
>if a sub-$100 dollar box can be identified that they run on.

Sub-$100 means that you're going to be taking an off-the-shelf consumer
device and retasking it with your own software.

OpenWRT and its descendants will get you Linux running on an off-the-shelf
router for the chipsets they support. Many of those boxes ran linux as
it was anyway.

Also, sub-$100 appliance form means that you have to make substantial cuts
in hardware features, which means its not a PC any longer, which means
you have to get specialized like OpenWRT.

Posted by Al Dykes on November 1, 2007, 12:19 pm
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>adykes@panix.com (Al Dykes) writes:
>>I feel the need for a new home dsl router coming on and I'm looking
>>for make and model sugggestions and ideas.
>
>>Cheap is good but an old PC has a big electric bill and is otherwise
>>uninteresting. I want an appliance. The box does NOT have to do WiFi.
>
>>I want a router that I can put some open-source software into that
>>gives me unix-ish network tools. The only open source I know of is
>>DD-WRT and that seems to be a WiFi system.
>
>OpenWRT is the more general one.
>


TNX, that's new to me.


Posted by Doug McIntyre on November 1, 2007, 2:00 pm
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adykes@panix.com (Al Dykes) writes:
>>adykes@panix.com (Al Dykes) writes:
>>>I feel the need for a new home dsl router coming on and I'm looking
>>>for make and model sugggestions and ideas.
>>
>>>Cheap is good but an old PC has a big electric bill and is otherwise
>>>uninteresting. I want an appliance. The box does NOT have to do WiFi.
>>
>>>I want a router that I can put some open-source software into that
>>>gives me unix-ish network tools. The only open source I know of is
>>>DD-WRT and that seems to be a WiFi system.
>>
>>OpenWRT is the more general one.

>TNX, that's new to me.

There's lots of varients of both. The Wikipedia entries for both have
lots of pointers off to various projects associated or
not-so-associated with them.


Posted by Timothy Daniels on November 2, 2007, 1:36 pm
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"Al Dykes" wrote:
> I feel the need for a new home dsl router coming on...

Please excuse my ignorance (as I'm router-challenged).
How does a DSL router differ from a cable router or a just
plain ol' router? I presume that there will be a network
interface ("modem") of sorts, and that from there to the
various computers there will be Ethernet. So how does a
DSL router differ from an Ethernet router?

*TimDaniels*



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