Currently I'm playing with two Mikrotik Routerboards and they are awesome.
For example the RB2011 costs 120 EUR with VAT and you get 5 Gb ports, 5 100Mb ports and Atheros AR93000 wireless, 600MHz MIPS CPU, 128MB of memory and 128MB flash. This is slightly above price of good home router but you get enterprise class features and unlimited config possibilities.
The routeros is based on Linux and you can either configure it through terminal or through Windows program called winbox. The beauty of it is that you can configure it anyway you want, you can make bridges, routes, firewall rules, DHCP server, DHCP client, PPPOE client, PPPOE server, SSTP client, L2TP client, you can put anything on any port. The 6.0 RC11 even has CA so you can create self signed certs for OpenVPN. Pretty much what you can do in Linux, you can do on this thing.
Downside is that Winbox sometimes creates buggy configs so you have to do lots of things in terminal but it's awesome otherwise.
I'm setting one up with OpenVPN + standard SOHO setup and another will have dual PPPOe clients for redundancy from dual ISPs.
I have been configuring another older model at some site and while WRT54GL got only 20-30Mbps download the Mikrotik pulled 100Mbps through torrent on 100Mb fiber line.
The plus side is that I've learned much more about networking while configuring them.
For example the RB2011 costs 120 EUR with VAT and you get 5 Gb ports, 5 100Mb ports and Atheros AR93000 wireless, 600MHz MIPS CPU, 128MB of memory and 128MB flash. This is slightly above price of good home router but you get enterprise class features and unlimited config possibilities.
The routeros is based on Linux and you can either configure it through terminal or through Windows program called winbox. The beauty of it is that you can configure it anyway you want, you can make bridges, routes, firewall rules, DHCP server, DHCP client, PPPOE client, PPPOE server, SSTP client, L2TP client, you can put anything on any port. The 6.0 RC11 even has CA so you can create self signed certs for OpenVPN. Pretty much what you can do in Linux, you can do on this thing.
Downside is that Winbox sometimes creates buggy configs so you have to do lots of things in terminal but it's awesome otherwise.
I'm setting one up with OpenVPN + standard SOHO setup and another will have dual PPPOe clients for redundancy from dual ISPs.
I have been configuring another older model at some site and while WRT54GL got only 20-30Mbps download the Mikrotik pulled 100Mbps through torrent on 100Mb fiber line.
The plus side is that I've learned much more about networking while configuring them.
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