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Date:      Wed, 7 Aug 2002 22:16:44 -0600
From:      "Jim McAtee" <jmcatee@mediaodyssey.com>
To:        <freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   Configuring a diskless firewall
Message-ID:  <08e401c23e92$677874d0$272fa8ce@jim>

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I'm considering getting a diskless rackmount "firewall appliance" and
setting up a FreeBSD firewall on it.  The computer uses a fairly standard
Intel PC architecture, with a PIII CPU, ServerWorks chipset and Award BIOS.
It's got 3 oboard NICs, and two standard IDE interfaces.  No onboard video,
nor keyboard or mouse ports - only a serial console port and an unused PCI
slot.  No CD-ROM or floppy drives, and no floppy port.  The system is
designed to run the OS and applications from solid state DOM
(disk-on-module), which plugs directly into one of the IDE HDD connectors.
An optional hard disk can be connected to the other IDE interface to be used
for storing logs.

Question is: How would I load BSD onto a system like this?  I suppose I
might temporarily hook up a CD-ROM drive to the unused IDE bus and boot from
the CD.  Or is it possible to set something up in the BIOS to boot from a
drive or TFTP server on the network?

Has anybody worked with solid state disks?  Is this just something that gets
configured within the BIOS and then becomes transparent to the OS, or would
there be special drivers to load in FreeBSD?

Thanks,
Jim


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