![]() ![]() Use console (Right click on device) to connect to device serial port. For 元 connectivity interface vlan 1 is created on the router. Both ports are L2 trunk ports connected to Titanium instances. Ports f1/0 and f1/1 are interfaces located on NM-16SW module that is inserted in the router 3725. For layer3 connectivity interfaces vlan1 are created on both instances. There are also switched trunk ports eth2/2 on both Titanium instances connecting instances to the router 3725. ![]() Titanium ports eth2/1 and mgmt0 are routed 元 ports connecting instances each other. Two Titanium instances are connected to 3725 router occupied with NM-16SW module. NxOS Emulator Titanium 5.1(2) VMware imageĪssuming that you have Qemu emulator installed and working set Qemu Guest settings as following. GNS3 0.8.3.1 installed on Fedora 17 Linux As GNS3 has built-in support for Qemu and Qemu can work with VMware vmdk images no cloud connection is needed for connection to external devices. The tutorial shows how to do connect Titanium VMware image to GNS3 using Qemu emulator. A copy of Titanium 5.1.(2) installed on VMware image has recently leaked to the Internet and now we can use it for our studies. I may install suricata as soon as I open any ports for VPNs or remote access to my Synology.Īny additional settings like VPNs and such I will need to learn, but I’m quite confident I will be able to do that.Titanium is Cisco Nexus Operating System NX-OS emulator made by Cisco. I installed pfBlockerNG, which doesn’t require any knowledge yet but I still need to configure it. That is basically as far as I came and as far as I really need to go to serve my family with a solid home network. Then I followed some tutorials to make the SG-1100 also replace our FttH router, so it is now connected directly to the NTU and processing internet and IPTV streams. Now that I have replaced the USG with the tiny SG-1100, I managed to configure the pfSense unit to have the same VLANs and I adjust settings in the UniFi controller to pass those VLANs to the UniFi stack. Before taking out my USG I had a fully functioning home network with 7 VLANs and all segregation was flawless, just like I want it to be. But I have a reasonable amount of experience doing VLANs in UniFi, setting up firewall rules and such. I will not deny I still have a lot to learn. So although I hear a lot of good stories about diy or other brand pfSense boxes, I think I will just get a netgate box, being very aware that I’m spending at least double of what I could pay otherwise. It’s already getting crowded in there with 25+ Ethernet cables connecting the entire home and two switches to tie them all together.Īlso, me and my family rely on our home network a lot: me and my wife both work from home (even before the corona pandemic) and we need stable connections. I know that at this point I’m a fairly bit deeper down the rabbit hole in networking and routers than fits my track record, but there may come a day when I just want the stuff to work.Īlso, in our cabinet I only have space for a small form factor device. Hi Greg, thanks a bunch for your elaborate reply and info, highly appreciated! My consideration for going netgate is that I can afford to spend the money and I really want something reliable that will nicely and quietly swallow any pfSense update netgate pushes without issues for years to come. I remember the SG-7100 being more money than the current price, I was pushing to get one of those a few years ago, but no budget and cannibalized a different server for the job after working out an alternate plan. That said, the SG-5100 should do it, and it seems the prices have come down since the last time I looked at their products. You can get some Intel i5 processor machines for a few hundred usd that would probably handle what you want to do. Serve The Home has some articles on their website about buying Tiny/Micro systems ( Tiny, mini, micro series) and setting them up for pfsense or Plex, might be worth a look. I’m not pushing my T620 Plus very hard, so no sure if it will handle everything you want, but it gets you going. The T620 Plus is normally going for around $160usd including the 4 port Intel NIC card and normally including shipping. You can also try a USB NIC, but I’d label this “for testing only”, tried it, lived with it for a while, gave up and bought what I needed to do the job correctly. If you are lucky, you might find one for around $40usd. You can do 2 NIC connections on the T620 and T630, but you need to get one with the fiber optic option. Have you worked with pfsense before? If not I’d buy a cheap HP T620 or T630 and set up router on a stick, or buy a more expensive T620 Plus with a quad port NIC and give it a test.
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