Home Network Firewall Options
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ERX all the way!
$60 on Amazon
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PFSense is a good free option, but it requires you provide your own PC class hardware, and the power bill will probably be 10X or more than an ERX.
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@Dashrender said:
PFSense is a good free option, but it requires you provide your own PC class hardware, and the power bill will probably be 10X or more than an ERX.
Thanks very much. I'll check it out.
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@Dashrender said:
PFSense is a good free option, but it requires you provide your own PC class hardware, and the power bill will probably be 10X or more than an ERX.
This right here.
pfSense is a great solution but requires hardware that will cost you more than an ERX ever will.
Drop another $80-$90 on an UAP-AC-LITE and you have a rock solid home network running basic enterprise hardware.
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Thanks for the info guys. Appreciate it.
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@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
PFSense is a good free option, but it requires you provide your own PC class hardware, and the power bill will probably be 10X or more than an ERX.
This right here.
pfSense is a great solution but requires hardware that will cost you more than an ERX ever will.
Drop another $80-$90 on an UAP-AC-LITE and you have a rock solid home network running basic enterprise hardware.
Sophos has the same options. Free, but requires a machine to run on.
https://www.sophos.com/en-us/products/free-tools/sophos-utm-home-edition.aspx
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i'm currently using pfsense for small size business, it works great all in one, but as other guys mentioned, a PC will consume much more electricity than a router device does
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@Dashrender said:
PFSense is a good free option, but it requires you provide your own PC class hardware, and the power bill will probably be 10X or more than an ERX.
Cost of hardware isn't the biggest factor.. the power is what will get you.
I'm using the Edge Router Lite.
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@jyates said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
PFSense is a good free option, but it requires you provide your own PC class hardware, and the power bill will probably be 10X or more than an ERX.
This right here.
pfSense is a great solution but requires hardware that will cost you more than an ERX ever will.
Drop another $80-$90 on an UAP-AC-LITE and you have a rock solid home network running basic enterprise hardware.
Sophos has the same options. Free, but requires a machine to run on.
https://www.sophos.com/en-us/products/free-tools/sophos-utm-home-edition.aspx
It's a resource hog...
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@Jason said:
@jyates said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
PFSense is a good free option, but it requires you provide your own PC class hardware, and the power bill will probably be 10X or more than an ERX.
This right here.
pfSense is a great solution but requires hardware that will cost you more than an ERX ever will.
Drop another $80-$90 on an UAP-AC-LITE and you have a rock solid home network running basic enterprise hardware.
Sophos has the same options. Free, but requires a machine to run on.
https://www.sophos.com/en-us/products/free-tools/sophos-utm-home-edition.aspx
It's a resource hog...
It's not been bad when I used it, even on a junk box processor with 2GB of Ram. What services were you using?
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@Breffni-Potter said:
@Jason said:
@jyates said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
PFSense is a good free option, but it requires you provide your own PC class hardware, and the power bill will probably be 10X or more than an ERX.
This right here.
pfSense is a great solution but requires hardware that will cost you more than an ERX ever will.
Drop another $80-$90 on an UAP-AC-LITE and you have a rock solid home network running basic enterprise hardware.
Sophos has the same options. Free, but requires a machine to run on.
https://www.sophos.com/en-us/products/free-tools/sophos-utm-home-edition.aspx
It's a resource hog...
It's not been bad when I used it, even on a junk box processor with 2GB of Ram. What services were you using?
Just the basics... but, how much throughput where you getting with it? I have a 150mb home internet connection. It couldn't saturate it. the Edege router Lite can..
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I was getting 38 when I'm expected to get a 40 down line at home. 100+ MB is not common here yet.
This was with all the IPS, gateway AV, content filtering on.
Do you remember the spec of the machine? Mine was a core 2 duo, with 2 dedicated gigabit cards for in/out, though it did have a 32GB SSD.
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@Breffni-Potter said:
I was getting 38 when I'm expected to get a 40 down line at home. 100+ MB is not common here yet.
This was with all the IPS, gateway AV, content filtering on.
Do you remember the spec of the machine? Mine was a core 2 duo, with 2 dedicated gigabit cards for in/out, though it did have a 32GB SSD.
Intel Xeon E5-xxx Quad with 8GB of ram and quad on board nic. NO SSD but that's not going to affect a router.
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@Jason said:
Intel Xeon E5-xxx Quad with 8GB of ram and quad on board nic. NO SSD but that's not going to affect a router.
Something very very wrong was happening then...maybe the quad NIC? If I get a decent outbound line, I'll try sticking the same box on it and test it. See what the performance is like.
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@Breffni-Potter said:
@Jason said:
Intel Xeon E5-xxx Quad with 8GB of ram and quad on board nic. NO SSD but that's not going to affect a router.
Something very very wrong was happening then...maybe the quad NIC? If I get a decent outbound line, I'll try sticking the same box on it and test it. See what the performance is like.
Nope wasn't the NIC.. Worked fine on Pfsense too. They were Intel NIC which are the best for firewalls. The CPU was just pegged out when trying to saturate 150mb, too much overhead with those UTM packages
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@Jason - Well, if I ever get a connection like that, I'll have a play.
I really liked the Sophos when it was on, ran it for about a year, then retired it.
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@Jason said:
@jyates said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
PFSense is a good free option, but it requires you provide your own PC class hardware, and the power bill will probably be 10X or more than an ERX.
This right here.
pfSense is a great solution but requires hardware that will cost you more than an ERX ever will.
Drop another $80-$90 on an UAP-AC-LITE and you have a rock solid home network running basic enterprise hardware.
Sophos has the same options. Free, but requires a machine to run on.
https://www.sophos.com/en-us/products/free-tools/sophos-utm-home-edition.aspx
It's a resource hog...
Anything labelled UTM would be. UTMs really can't be used on anything but super slow connections. It's one of the many reasons many of us feel that the entire UTM concept is a silly and dead one.
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@Breffni-Potter said:
I was getting 38 when I'm expected to get a 40 down line at home. 100+ MB is not common here yet.
This was with all the IPS, gateway AV, content filtering on.
Do you remember the spec of the machine? Mine was a core 2 duo, with 2 dedicated gigabit cards for in/out, though it did have a 32GB SSD.
150 up 150 down here ^_^
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Jason said:
@jyates said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
PFSense is a good free option, but it requires you provide your own PC class hardware, and the power bill will probably be 10X or more than an ERX.
This right here.
pfSense is a great solution but requires hardware that will cost you more than an ERX ever will.
Drop another $80-$90 on an UAP-AC-LITE and you have a rock solid home network running basic enterprise hardware.
Sophos has the same options. Free, but requires a machine to run on.
https://www.sophos.com/en-us/products/free-tools/sophos-utm-home-edition.aspx
It's a resource hog...
Anything labelled UTM would be. UTMs really can't be used on anything but super slow connections. It's one of the many reasons many of us feel that the entire UTM concept is a silly and dead one.
I've been running Sophos UTM on a 300/100Mbps connection at home (certainly not a slow connection) and easily get full bandwidth usage with everything turned on. Granted I'm running it on a Dell R210 II and it is a bigger resource hog, but for home, I want all of that turned on, especially with teenagers who don't care about sites they visit or what they download. In the SMB (closer to S than M or B of SMB anyway) I've found the UTM approach anything but silly. The simplicity of management is a huge bonus.