From owner-freebsd-small Mon Oct 25 7:55: 0 1999 Delivered-To: freebsd-small@freebsd.org Received: from mail.rdc2.occa.home.com (ha1.rdc2.occa.home.com [24.2.8.66]) by hub.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 81B6215022 for ; Mon, 25 Oct 1999 07:54:57 -0700 (PDT) (envelope-from shansen@earthlink.net) Received: from p2 ([24.9.137.53]) by mail.rdc2.occa.home.com (InterMail v4.01.01.00 201-229-111) with ESMTP id <19991025145457.WUPI8534.mail.rdc2.occa.home.com@p2> for ; Mon, 25 Oct 1999 07:54:57 -0700 From: "Skip Hansen" To: freebsd-small@FreeBSD.ORG Date: Mon, 25 Oct 1999 08:00:40 -0700 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT Subject: Re: picobsd micro nat box Reply-To: shansen@earthlink.net In-reply-to: <199910250642.XAA16646@dingo.cdrom.com> References: Your message of "Sun, 24 Oct 1999 08:56:28 PDT." <199910241556.IAA27938@h4.private> X-mailer: Pegasus Mail for Win32 (v3.12a) Message-Id: <19991025145457.WUPI8534.mail.rdc2.occa.home.com@p2> Sender: owner-freebsd-small@FreeBSD.ORG Precedence: bulk X-Loop: FreeBSD.ORG > > Lets see... > > > > 1. Take one Lantronix, Emulex, Summix, Zimax, etc., print spooler > > box. These have 1 ethernet 10/100 mbps, 2 parallel port, 1 serial > > port interface. OK OK, these use a wall plug power supply. > > But the box I am looking at right now is 8inches wide, 1 inch high (thick), > > and 5 inches deep. > ... > > I will not claim that the code changes are 'trivial' but if you are > > familiar with IPFilter then it takes about a day. > > > > The configuration and user interface is a bit more work. > > > > Ummm... the whole slamboodle, with IPNAt, and Print spooling, > > etc. etc. is about 982K, (compressed), uses about 8 Mbytes > > RAM. You can save the configuration in CMOS (Dallas makes some > > VERY interesting RTC, RAM chips just for this purpose). > > Great. So tell me where I can buy one or more, and how to build and > blast new firmware into it. 8) I wonder if there are any cheap printer servers that run an x86 that could be reverse engineered or something. My PicoBSD NAT box cost nothing since it was an old 486 that I already had, but it still takes up a lot of space, has noisy fans and generates a lot more heat than I remembered (even without the hard disk). $600 strikes me as pretty expensive, I've seen several simular boxes in the $200 - $400 range. For example Zyxel has a Nat box is $249. (http://www.zyxel.com/html/product/soho_html/p310.html) Skip To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-small" in the body of the message