Thank you for reporting energy consumption. This is really useful in RVs where running from battery power is a way of life.
@spudmckenzie49593 жыл бұрын
Also off grid solar.
@pinaz9933 жыл бұрын
Living in an RV, you say? If your home is truly mobile, would you mind telling me about your WiFi reception setup? I know that RV parks are infamous for poor WiFi, but by and large, it's really not entirely their fault.
@RogerWilco13 жыл бұрын
@@pinaz993 Wifi is mostly useless, but a MOFI with a pair of 10DB omni antennas works great -- so far. a MOFI is a little linux box with cellular modem that provides a hardware router and wifi onboard, highly configurable. So not idiot proof like most products for the RV industry, but easy to use without reading the manual for someone like me who never reads the manual (but knows a lot about technology.) YMMV
@nexxusty3 жыл бұрын
This device is PERFECT for a battery run home. Lol, buying mine in preparation for just that.
@pilabs32063 жыл бұрын
hahaha a 28 nm cuad a72 without crypto extension is the worst on energy efficiency fot a router...
@wallyhare86163 жыл бұрын
Love the bloopers at the end. Just shows a small amount of the struggle that goes into video production. Anyone that thumbs down does not know the struggle, time,& effort that goes into making a single video.
@Maybe-So3 жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same thing. Jeff (and everyone else really) that makes a fantastic product, rarely does it in one go; it (apparently!!) takes HOURS to make a good presentation, particularly one with all the details that Jeff puts in his. Pretty amazing, Jeff - fantastic job. Thank you for sharing.
@LuxFerre42423 жыл бұрын
PuTTY is no longer needed for SSH on Windows. OpenSSH is built in as of April 2018.
@MrNeocortex3 жыл бұрын
Yeah. Just use Powershell.
@waltherstolzing97193 жыл бұрын
@@MrNeocortex There's even an OpenSSH *server* on windows 10 nowadays; so it's possible to ssh (&sftp) into windows directly.
@muelleel3 жыл бұрын
Windows is no longer needed. Everything can be done on Linux as of May 2021
@zaggery3 жыл бұрын
old habits die hard lol
@tylercgarrison3 жыл бұрын
Not at my computer atm so I can't easily check for myself.. But I'm running LTSC, which ends up being behind on some things. Do you know if it's in there?
@t1mmy133 жыл бұрын
I'm really liking where the pi ecosystem is headed with all these developments! Like, this kind of applications were always talked about but never truly feasible for every day use because of the interface limitations, now I finally really can consider using a pi as a router
@Vatharian3 жыл бұрын
If Raspberry Pi 5 includes pcie 3.0 or 4.0 or even 2.0, but with four lanes, that's going to be MUCH more interesting. I kind of imagine RPi 5 coming with single OCuLink sticking out of the board...
@sebastianwendl6033 жыл бұрын
I usually only use raspberries for messing around and trying stuff. Even the old "standard" raspberries are pretty awesome for this. But imagining the possibilities, some of the new stuff opens up... Warms my heart, thinking of all the things I will probably fail at sometimes in the future :)
@ole-martinbratteng40143 жыл бұрын
Take a look at Ivan's WIP for blade servers using the CM4 twitter.com/Merocle/status/1407684311344730117
@friedrich12773 жыл бұрын
@@Vatharian i hope that the Pi 5 CM will have the same connector like the CM 4 version, so you can keep your old "breakout boards"
@Vatharian3 жыл бұрын
@@friedrich1277 If it will have different connectivity, like pcie x4 2.0 port, it will be bad. It all depends on its CPU, since they are targeting price point, not feature set. Other than that, just couple of days ago R Pi foundation confirmed they are working on RPi 4 A, but there is no work being done on RPi 5, neither prototyping nor design wise.
@kurtnelle3 жыл бұрын
Oh thank Goodness. Somebody's making a Pi router. Time to buy!
@andrewyoung87033 жыл бұрын
I hope you got your order in. Looks like they've sold out for now.
@kurtnelle3 жыл бұрын
@@andrewyoung8703 Nope, I didn't make it in time.
@nigratruo3 жыл бұрын
I would just use the standard Pi, much cheaper and more modular.
@nickadams23613 жыл бұрын
when this guy actually makes a product ready product is the day pigs fly. He's gunna stick to yt click bate
@frankearl92853 жыл бұрын
@@nigratruo : That depends on what you need/want out of said router. Like Jeff highlighted in the video...
@lewddrip53832 жыл бұрын
bruh until now i was just reading your books and appreciating how you explain everything so well and only now i found out you have a youtube channel???
@CocoaBeachLiving3 жыл бұрын
As an 'old timer it dude, I thought I was done with this level of fun.. I like the way you help people understand the pros and cons of these boards.
@JeffGeerling3 жыл бұрын
Thanks! What's old is new, and all that jazz-I see a lot of people getting back into the 'build your own' game these days, probably as a knee-jerk reaction to how much modern computing platforms are getting locked down. The big difference is unlike 20-40 years ago, you can get the equivalent of like 500 back-then cray supercomputers at your disposal. Makes things a lot more fun (IMO)!
@chrisb93193 жыл бұрын
I feel like the price would be a big no-no for me when things like the Edgerouter X for unter 50 bucks exist if you just need a good router and don't utilize the hdmi port, the usb ports or the GPIO pins.
@randomunavailable3 жыл бұрын
I've been using a p3b+ as a router for years. I don't have or need gigabyte speeds so it's worked perfectly for my needs.
@KwanLowe3 жыл бұрын
Super video! I applauded for $10.00 👏👏👏
@JeffGeerling3 жыл бұрын
Thanks ;)
@CraigMullins13 жыл бұрын
Can't wait to see the 2.5 gig show!
@minxythemerciless3 жыл бұрын
Also of interest is the nano pi r2s dual-homed router. It works well at 1 Gbps on both ports. It's capable of 2.5 Gbps but under armbian the present driver is unstable. I've run an R2S for quite a while now and using the excellent heatsink case I've never had any issues. It just works well
@g1n03 жыл бұрын
Super video! I applauded for €2.00 👏
@peppekerstens3 жыл бұрын
Stil loving your bloopers at the end.. and your valueble insights on anything cm4 of course 👍
@thomaseboland87013 жыл бұрын
This reminds me of the 25 year old LPR - Linux Router Project. To build your own router then, you took an older computer, and added two or more 10/100 Ethernet cards. Gigabit ethernet was new and expensive, and only really viable for cheap projects like this after the year 2000. You would set one config file on a floppy and boot the entire computer with only one 1.4MB 3.5" floppy drive. That was both OS and config. Bigger than the Pi for sure, but at time it was revolutionarily cheap. Routers of the day were hundreds of dollars and specialty equipment.
@JeffGeerling3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I remember thinking Gigabit was exotic when I was still installing 10baseT and fancy 10/100 cards in some servers back in the day. 1 Gbps is so common and cheap now... makes you forget how slow a congested old network was-floppy-disk-like speeds over the network were common!
@GustavoMsTrashCan3 жыл бұрын
I'm gonna yoink the dfrobot one before it runs out of stock. Thanks for sharing!
@JeffGeerling3 жыл бұрын
I'm hoping they can keep these in stock a while!
@BowenMarmot3 жыл бұрын
@@JeffGeerling Out of stock as of at least a couple hours ago.
@nexxusty3 жыл бұрын
Lol, nope. I ordered anyway, better get it within 2 months or I'll just cancel.
@Reevesi3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this. I had forgotten about my Pi's for the last year and now impressed with how it's going. I'm back in the game. Kudos
@terryleach89333 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@ul79873 жыл бұрын
Man this is all foreign language to me, but I love it, LOL! This things are getting better and better with the performance and technology out of the box!! I'm learning so much from your videos, thank you for your dedication and passion to the community!
@Badg0r10 ай бұрын
Oh wow you're looking young in this video. I've seen almost all of your videos UpTo now, and saw this one which I haven't seen. You're the best.
@baganatube3 жыл бұрын
I and my Pi 4 and a couple of USB-3 ethernet dongles under my desk were waiting for this video. Thank you for making it!
@topperdude20073 жыл бұрын
Great video as always! I was seriously considering getting the DFRobot to try / play around with till I saw they jacked up the price by 50%. I mean, $45 for the SEED seems reasonable since it also has the additional capabilities of potentially doing double duty as a NAS as pointed out in the video - so not sure how DFRobot can justify jacking up the price. I know Jeff pointed out the slower throughputs on SEED but that should not be an issue for folks with say 500Mbps or lower speeds. Anyway, keep up the great work, Jeff! 👍
@xxportalxx.3 жыл бұрын
Meanwhile the avg internet speed in my town is like 1.5Mbps..
@jfbeam3 жыл бұрын
Chip supply. The SEED may be cheaper, but it's a USB hub, which sucks.
@D9ID9I3 жыл бұрын
It has crappy 1Gbe downlink to your switch. What NAS are you talking about? That's a nonsense. Imagine you ul/dl something to/from NAS and that will shut down your internet completely. Silly idea.
@RfdAviator853 жыл бұрын
I just ordered a CM4 with Wireless, 4GB ram, and 32GB eMMC and the DFRobot bundle - cant wait to make this my primary router for the fibre coming into the house
@loginregional3 жыл бұрын
HOLEY UNDERWEAR, this immediately brought to mind the old 486 4meg headless floppy equipped, keyboardless machine with 2 interfaces running one of my favourite solutions FLOPPYFW (1.6meg) at my chilean cyber cafe up to 2003. Not a router... but a good way to make use of 'obsolete' hardware. No harddisk, no pool, no pets. It aint got no cigarettes.
@SimonQuigley3 жыл бұрын
Haha, I ran a similar machine with a Linux Router Project floppy disk in it, with a 56k modem hanging off it
@loginregional3 жыл бұрын
@@SimonQuigley Got you beat on that, ours was 64K dedicated with 16 addresses. OUCH! About 600 a month. GLORY DAYS!!
@SimonQuigley3 жыл бұрын
@@loginregional lol, I "upgraded" to a Windows 95 machine with a NetJet ISDN interface card for 56 or 112k digital connection, using Sygate(? actually, I think it was WinGate) for NAT.. Horrible memories.
@loginregional3 жыл бұрын
@@SimonQuigley RUN AWAY! RUN AWAY! Worst. Software. Ever. I used it for a very short time for a smaller cybercafe in 97 that used dialup. There was a solution in SuSE at the time... but my bwain is ti...r...ed. Best command learned at the time: dd. Made doing images S.I.M.P.L.E
@JJE9903 жыл бұрын
5:53 "or if you're using PuTTy on Windows" Whilst using PuTTy is perfectly valid, Windows now natively supports SSH in the command prompt. You might have to enable it in the system settings but it's there :)
@JeffGeerling3 жыл бұрын
I didn't realize that but will have to check it out soon!
@videoinformer3 жыл бұрын
It's humble of you to show bloopers at the end, without which we'd be convinced you were flawless! This also shows the diligent work you put in to produce a flawless end production, as easy as you make it look.
@SomeTechGuy6663 жыл бұрын
Fantastic content. I happen to be in need of a mobile, small router for in field use. Your video just saved me a lot of time and headache.
@paulmichaelfreedman83343 жыл бұрын
for a year now, I've been running a Pi4B as openwrt router with VLANS uplinked with a single Gbit cable to a Layer 2 managed switch. One port on the switch goes to a 500/500 Fibre optic media converter. It works absolutely fabulously, no hiccups, lightning fast DNS (unbound) and full 500/500 speed despite SPI. It has completely replaced the standard router(zyxel) supplied by the carrier. The line between LAN and Internet has faded nearly completely.
@Anthestudios3 жыл бұрын
Looking forward to your 2.5 Gb version. Loved this video and the production quality. Thanks!
@jamestschirhart2692 жыл бұрын
I currently have the DFRobot router board coming in the mail so i cant wait to play around with WRT again!
@gorbek3 жыл бұрын
If anyone's looking for a minimal linux based OpenWRT gigabit router, consider the NanoPi R4S using FriendlyWRT (based on OpenWRT). It uses an RK3399 so it's not quite the same as these PI based routers but it has great performance and you can get it with a passively cooled metal enclosure. It's great.
@TerryMundy3 жыл бұрын
There's a lot of talk nowadays about going green and energy consumption. Devices like the Pi that is so versatile and use such small amount of energy is a bonus for me.
@starkastic3 жыл бұрын
Still looking forward to the testing on the dual port 2.5gbps card you teased.
@RaptorTila3 жыл бұрын
Great info and test results, thanks for all the work.. and I love the out-takes, they made my day.. Keep up all the great work!
@GeorgeMulak3 жыл бұрын
You are amazing. What a lot of work and so well done! I love the bloopers at the end. God bless you.
@AdamShumpis3 жыл бұрын
I'd check out the NanoPi R4S 4GB if you're looking for a robust OpenWRT router for gigabit connections with SQM.
@kennethconnors53163 жыл бұрын
very impressive video, well thought out and edited ,you answered "EVERY" possible question I had .. "WELL DONE"
@Aviduduskar3 жыл бұрын
If all you need are two Gigabyte ports, the NanoPi R4S is a powerful router that runs OpenWRT and can manage a 1 Gigabit WAN uplink with SQM. Search for tests done on reddit, it smokes the RPi.
@zac_in_ak3 жыл бұрын
Can't wait for the one with the 2.5g board. Love your stuff. You are the only KZbinr that I have all notifications on. keep up the great work.
@ats19952 жыл бұрын
Great you include FLENT for network testing. It gives a great details over performance!
@CrisanBogdan3 жыл бұрын
I believe you can get really good value switches or routers but, having a RPI like this to play with OpenWRT is heaven on earth Low power consumption, ability to use part of the router in other projects (I'm talking about the CM4 board) and the software supports that will keep on growing over time is very nice! Also, did you have a look at Banana PI R2?
@BeefIngot3 жыл бұрын
Tip about 0 tolerance stls: You can use the Horizontal Expansion setting in Cura (or equivalent in anything else) to make it smaller in the axis that are usually the problem (X, Y). Bonus tip: You can use Initial Layer Horizontal Expansion to get rid of elephants foot
@JeffGeerling3 жыл бұрын
Thanks! I'll take a look at that next time I do a build like this-I'm still pretty new to slicing and dicing in 3D printing :)
@dogsop3 жыл бұрын
@@JeffGeerling How do you convert the step file the DFRobot supplies to files for the 3D printer?
@JeffGeerling3 жыл бұрын
@@dogsop I used Fusion 360 (Personal / non-commercial license) to select each of the case parts, and export them individually to STL files.
@jeraldtowle27183 жыл бұрын
Really appreciate the outtakes. Keeping it real.
@simonescuderi59773 жыл бұрын
RTK 8111-H support MSI and MSI-X, meaning that it doesn't use IRQ that much. NAPI infrastructure with MSI uses interrupt mitigation, disabling interrupts when there's high load, working in a somewhat synchronous mode. What 8111 lacks (I think) is a multiple queues infrastructure that server NICs have, that could boost performances even more sharing interrupts between multiple cores instead of always hitting the same core.
@AMFLearning3 жыл бұрын
My best scenes whole thing in the KZbin Mr Jeff is the end of this video, Mr Jeff has repeated taking a scenes 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼 All your video is good and it is inspired amflearning by doing Thanks alot Mr Jeff 🙏🏼
@lepatenteux59210 ай бұрын
I just found that video... I have bought the Seeed model in june, and I the speeds are a lot better than what you get here! It saturates the gigabit connexion no problem... My speed tests are getting me around 940Mbps up and down with the firewall active. I used a stock OpenWRT image as I did not want to use the one provided directly by Seeed... because reasons! I might add that I had speed issues when using a PSU that was not powerfull enough. The one that works is a 4amp 5V PSU
@trbolexis3 жыл бұрын
Ive got a Pi4 setup as a router (OpenWRT) using its single gigabit port - setup with VLAN through a managed switch for connection to WAN and LAN. Speeds hang out at 930s Up and 840s Down on ATT Fiber.
@naumanshakir93443 жыл бұрын
Have been looking to made a OoemWrt router using Pi since too long, this video covers it all!
@solomonshv2 жыл бұрын
it's a neat little gadget, but the ubiquiti edgerouter ER-X is $60 last time i checked. alternatively, you can buy an older thin client PC and stick a quad 1G NIC or dual 2.5G NIC into it for under $90. so, this is really not worth it. but that's just my opinion.
@markabrams62863 жыл бұрын
Thanks. Great review of exactly the 2 boards I've been looking into!
@mitcoes3 жыл бұрын
Will after the 2.5 Gb come the 10 Gb one and then the 10 GB + NAS / with 8 SATA interfaces?
@JeffGeerling3 жыл бұрын
Heh... 10 GbE is coming soon too; already have it working-though max throughput is sadly limited to 3.42 Gbps due to the Pi's PCIe x1 Gen 2 lane :(
@mitcoes3 жыл бұрын
@@JeffGeerling Would a pine Rockpro64 or any other RK3399 SMB such as khadas or SmartFly ones with Pcie x4 Gen 2.1 lanes be able to be faster?
@gorudonu3 жыл бұрын
that would be great !
@pfabiszewski3 жыл бұрын
@@JeffGeerling waiting for Pi 5 I guess ;)
@AshishPurohit3 жыл бұрын
Great work as usual Jeff. I get to learn a lot even though I'm not planning to use a pi as a router. Thanks!
@Nono-hk3is3 жыл бұрын
64 byte packets are almost pathologically small. They are legal, of course, and it is a good test to do, but I'd also always do a test with maybe 512 bytes. The reason is that there's always a packets-per-second limit (due to IRQ or similar I/O limitations). Also, because the internal data structures used to store packets in memory are likely to be larger than 64 bytes, the system may actually be transferring more data per packet already. So either way there's a good chance that you can get a higher average bitrate by using bigger packets, because it gets more data through "for free".
@k1tajfar7142 ай бұрын
Love your videos! Please make videos around your drivers you make and low level programming stuff please! Thanks.
@dimitris470 Жыл бұрын
I use edgerouter most of the time, but the normal pi4 is awesome for router duty. I've been using mine as a backup router on my home network, when my DSL dies. Either through its wifi and my phone in hotspot duty, or through a 3g usb modem. Openwrt works like a charm with minimal fiddling
@mohammadmekayelanik74083 жыл бұрын
Waiting eagerly for the duel 2.5Gig networking video! Hats up Jeff. :)
@keithpetrino3 жыл бұрын
With an 802.1q-compatible managed switch, you could just use the pi as a router with its single gigabit port via the "router-on-a-stick" method. You'd just route traffic from one vlan (used for your wan connection) to another (used for your lan). The pi would be attached to the switch via a "trunk" port belonging to both the wan and lan vlans, and then just route traffic to and fro. I'm not sure how the performance would compare to the methods described in the video but people have done it and say it works well. I think this is how many consumer routers work internally anyway.
@zadekeys21943 жыл бұрын
I wish dual nics were more common ie on larger (workstation) laptops, on the pi etc. I'd love to see a firewall like Untangle /pfsense running well on a 12v tiny router. The masses need a decent plug and play solution.
@5Breaker3 жыл бұрын
"I only got 700 MBit/s" Mean while in Germany... everyone cries when they got at least 16 MBit/s
@rjhornsby3 жыл бұрын
Happen to catch his upload speed? I think it was somewhere around 20-25Mb/s. Don’t know what it’s like elsewhere, but that’s one of the stupid, infuriating games residential ISPs - especially cable - often play here in the U.S. They way over provision the lines so you’re fighting with your neighbors over shared bandwidth, and sacrifice all upload speed to market “super fast not-at-all-a-monopoly (download) internet speed”. Then pretend to be stupid and act like upstream is wha? Often with cable, my case included (“business” account), I can now buy “1Gb/s (down)” - but 30 up, just 3%, is max. Unless I want to pay starting at $850/month + construction fees for 50/50 fiber.
@5Breaker3 жыл бұрын
@@rjhornsby wow 850$ for 50/50 Fibre is actually cheap. In Germany 😆
@JeffGeerling3 жыл бұрын
If there were any way I could get 50 Mbps upload, I'd gladly pay more than the $150/month I'm currently paying for my 20-30 up :)
@kujamasarulp78713 жыл бұрын
@@JeffGeerling your paying 150$ for an 1000/30 cable connection? well ill never cry about the prices here :D - 1000/50 cable connection in germany is like 50€ / around 60$ oO - only DSL / Fibre Connection is getting kinda expensive
@Nikl7203 жыл бұрын
Same here with the slow upload I have 1gbit down and 50 up with vodafone cable 50€ in germany ;) (But i live in berlin and it makes me sad seeing that even in the capital you dont have real access to fibre)
@amessman3 жыл бұрын
1:29 USB NICs are always unreliable in my experience. I would've liked to see both ports on the same controller though
@hex23073 жыл бұрын
Probably explains the slower speed.
@rekkenberX3 жыл бұрын
Hi, have you seen the Nanopi r2s? If so, have you done test on it? I'm planning to buy one as my next router so I've been doing a little research on the side but there's only a few video on KZbin about that device
@Tzwcard-x3 жыл бұрын
There's a board called "NanoPi R2S" by FriendlyARM, which has 1 PCIE GbE NIC and 1 USB GbE NIC Don't know if you check that thing already tho
@tramcrazy3 жыл бұрын
Wow, what cool little router boards! Great video Jeff 👌
@razibbaf3 жыл бұрын
You are simply great! Human race is benefited by you!
@talbech3 жыл бұрын
Awesome review and thanks for sharing. Regards from someone who built (cross-compiled) tiny Gentoo systems for Soekris hardware back in the days for multi-wan routers.
@RyouConcord3 жыл бұрын
So COOL!! thank you for these in depth reviews. I've been hoping for things that would replace my glinet mini router.
@warmwaffles3 жыл бұрын
Use IRQBA... oh, good you did it already.
@nickadams23613 жыл бұрын
tested one device. This channel is annoying click bait for noobs.
@KiraSlith3 жыл бұрын
The real value of something like this is as an IPFire or PFSense host or a MitM for Wireshark, thus why the DFRobot's case design gives the CPU so much open air access. I'd start with IPFire since it is proper FOSSy, but it needs some porting work done to run on the Pi4.
@richardhockey8442 Жыл бұрын
things I didn't expect to see appearing the same shot: a hacksaw and a raspberry pi :)
@bennyfactor3 жыл бұрын
Love your videos, Jeff. They are succinct and informative and pleasant. Really need to get into the raspi ecosystem after I got burned on edison a few years ago
@Shmoozo553 жыл бұрын
The difference in throughput for the two router boards likely matters to people who have gigabit (or faster) internet connections, but some of us have internet connections that are limited to a small fraction of that speed. My own connection, which uses a cable modem, is set to 100 megabit speed which for my purposes generally feels quite zippy and has never felt less than completely adequate. I suspect that most of the small, perceptible delay I see in things arriving here comes from various limitations and latencies on the servers and services I am accessing. Considering the higher cost of a faster connection and my lack of any need for more speed than I am currently getting, I will likely stick with this for the foreseeable future. Viewed in the context of my use case the difference between the performance levels of the two boards is of no consequence whatsoever which means that the other differences between the two boards dominate my evaluation of the two. Fortunately, Jeff has kindly spent time discussing all those other differences as well. Thank you, Jeff.
@JeffGeerling3 жыл бұрын
You're quite welcome! And I'd be perfectly happy with 100 Mbps down, if I could get 50 or 100 Mbps up. Unfortunately the only way I can get 30 Mbps up is to pay for the way overpowered "gigabit" plan :(
@LiLBitsDK3 жыл бұрын
love all that tiny stuff I can tinker with myself... screw buying a "premade" router where is the fun in that?
@JeffGeerling3 жыл бұрын
This is the way.
@NickBouwhuis3 жыл бұрын
For sure. I really like my pcengines apu4 board
@IncertusetNescio3 жыл бұрын
I love the idea, I dislike the headache that caused twice (on successes, excluding failures) when I built my own out of a pile of desktop parts. Worked well when it did, but broke like a house of cards any time you had to touch it. Great if I can set up a separate tinker lab and it isn't my own home LAN at stake. Definitely more fun that way and I get to learn stuff.
@nickadams23613 жыл бұрын
@@JeffGeerling make a for real production ready product for people. This is half ass work and annoying. All your videos are just look it works on a pi then you move onto the next half ass video. Put real effort and perfection into these. literally anyone that is can sit and ask questions at google for 30min could make these videos. please put in more effort and thought
@dluckie7472 жыл бұрын
hey man great video, As a long-time networking nerd still gnawing at the idea of finishing my CCIE, one thought was to perform UDP based iperf to get TCP windowing and retransmissions out of the way.
@datawolk3 жыл бұрын
Take a look at the Nano Pi R2s. Very interesting and cheap router sbc.
@nobushi3 жыл бұрын
There is also the R4S which uses PCIe GbE, instead of USB3 Ethernet of R2S.
@edbouhl31002 жыл бұрын
Best price I’ve seen is directly from the manufacturer in China. Shipping takes awhile though.
@MichaelSmith-fg8xh3 жыл бұрын
I'm stunned to see that routing performance given how many retail routers won't (really) route at that speed.
@JeffGeerling3 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately, a lot of retail routers use pretty terrible chips (performance-wise), whereas the Pi 4 isn't a powerhouse, but it's not a slouch either!
@madbullen3 жыл бұрын
Hi Jeff, have you ever though about looking at some of the Nano Pis with the Rockchip? like NanoPi R4S or R2S?
@cakemnstr423 жыл бұрын
dang. don't want your Raspberry Pi 4 Model B to be off center. Good thing you caught that!
@leftblank3 жыл бұрын
Another amazing video Jeff. Thank you
@CyberBlaed3 жыл бұрын
Love the bloopers. I mean, i love your content but the bloopers are too fun aswell. :) Stay cool Jeff!!
@RAZREXE3 жыл бұрын
Recommendations working fine again
@igfoobar3 жыл бұрын
Just use a regular Pi4, run the inside and outside networks of different VLANs. As long as your switch can handle a trunk, you're good to go. That's not even cutting corners, we do it in our data centers all the time.
@GeoffreyHowells3 жыл бұрын
Network/Admin flashbacks... Great videos. Keep them coming :)
@_kwak3 жыл бұрын
I've been looking to use a pi zero w as a wireless router out and about to connect multiple wireless clients to each other for LAN connections. This is a perfect project for inspiration and further research, thanks. Edit: I don't need high bandwidth or anything intense, it would mostly be used for Nintendo switch gaming TCP packets that don't care about data integrity and are not overly large.
@cattigereyes1 Жыл бұрын
I would like to see pi5 be able to have a external graphics card and faster four core processors. Might be eight core at 2.5 ghz
@K0S3K3 жыл бұрын
I like, how you chase the installation status bar with your mouse... I do the same
@JeffGeerling3 жыл бұрын
How else does one survive the mundane tasks of everyday life?
@xaytana3 жыл бұрын
I hope the Zeros are getting RPI 4 updates soon. I don't have a need for a RPI router, at least not until it can fully replace an off the shelf router, 1 upstream port, 4 downstream ports, and decent wireless capabilities are a baseline standard for non-mesh setups, MoCA capabilities are also a nice addon; but a RPI will never have the expandability for this, some other SBCs however might reach into the territory of being capable of it. But having an updated Zero, hopefully functioning off of Type C mode switching for passive ethernet dongle purposes, could work well as a PiHole unit. Similarly, a Zero, while tapping the PCIe functionality of RPI 4, with a much, much better wireless chip, could be the basis for a decent mesh network setup; alternatively, swap WiFi for a different wireless standard and have smarthome integration based off RPI, IIRC someone was working on Z-Wave integration for RPI and getting an RPI-based product Z-Wave certified.
@DerekMurawsky3 жыл бұрын
First, thanks for the awesome videos! You always have such great content! On your initial statement on what a router is... technically a router just routes between two networks. Whether it's internal or external doesn't matter. A consumer grade "router" also does Network Address Translation between your internal IPs and an external IP. They also sometimes have firewalling features. It's much easier to route than nat/firewall from a computational perspective. Does it matter in the real world on a pi? No idea!
@JeffGeerling3 жыл бұрын
Note that OpenWRT's default config does do NAT and has a simple firewall (with about 8 rules) configured by default.
@IntenseGrid Жыл бұрын
Sure would be nice to have a 3rd port (via pci-e) with a GigE 8port switch chip and connectors on it. This would allow for 1 port for Internet, 1 port for DMZ, and 8 ports for the home lan.
@workyz19803 жыл бұрын
You are best of the best! And thanks for simple english!!
@dlbower19562 жыл бұрын
I can confirm the USB Ethernet port lights work on the seeed board. 500-600 Mbit throughput still holds.
@socielo2 жыл бұрын
I am using a standard Raspberry Pi 3 as load balancing and failover router with two fiber optics based Internet connections for my office.
@squirrel_ca97452 жыл бұрын
Please for the love of all that is good, please could you test and see if the DFRobot will run PFSense? Been thinking of using a Pi to run PFSense for a few years now. The DFRobot sounds like it might be exactly what I’ve been looking for. ARM might be the determining factor though.
@callisoncaffrey2 жыл бұрын
Let me know if you find something out. I intend to run OpenBSD.
@trevor87622 жыл бұрын
So from the sounds of it, the DFRobot board would be better suited to a kub cluster with etcd since etcd would be writing a large amount of smaller packets. I do intend to use an external ssd like I have with another Pi build to avoid sequential read/write bottlenecks on the storage. Would it be possible to boot off of SSD using a CM4/CM4Lite on the DFRobot board? The USB2.0 bandwidth limitations are not a huge concern for me since I don't believe the data is really bandwidth intensive enough to reach a bottleneck there. Love your content! Thanks!
@iamashyura3 жыл бұрын
Thank you! U got my interest on dfrobot.
@rajathgeorgep Жыл бұрын
Fantastic Hardwork. Very informative
@SeanPorterPDX3 жыл бұрын
now we just need one with 3 or 4 ports... (I want a separate port for WLAN, and maybe another for untrusted devices...)
@pinaz9933 жыл бұрын
Your best bet is probably a MikroTik device. Too much extra would tax the Pi without a lot of all extra ASIC installed. A hAP ac3 or a RB2011 w/ wireless would probably suit your needs best, without knowing more about your use case.
@nela99943 жыл бұрын
So … I do have to ask, what use is a two port router? If you are connecting two machines, why not just use a flip cable, and you get complete throughout, and if you are connecting a machine to a router just use a longer cable?
@youruniquehandle23 жыл бұрын
I'm guessing the purpose is to have the pi router handle the bridge from WAN to LAN, then connect the pi to a network switch with however many ports you need. I'd be curious how many ports the pi could support. Would we see major throttling when routing for 8, 16, 32+ ports?
@rednassie11013 жыл бұрын
I use a RPI4 as a NAS (OMV5) with a USB3.0 4TB HDD and it it able to max out my gigabit speeds, no need for an SSD regarding speeds
@mrwho303 жыл бұрын
That look at 0:00 "Fascinating!"
@JeffGeerling3 жыл бұрын
(In his best Spock voice)
@mcdermg3 жыл бұрын
Another great video and the bloopers always make me laugh. Sterling work as always Jeff
@QuestionTheTruth3 жыл бұрын
Ooh! a hardware firewall / pi-hole! ^^ I need to get one of those, so I can reroute the traffic. ^^