[LUAU] Anyone use a Linksys NSLU2? USB hard disk drives are FOSSfriendly?

Brian Chee chee at hawaii.edu
Thu Dec 28 12:05:09 PST 2006


Yet more stuff for the home micro machine builder.....nice collection of
hard to find super small machines...

http://linuxdevices.com/articles/AT2016997232.html

Keep in mind that the N!C (new internet computer) is no longer available.
HOSEF snagged a whole bunch from me a while back...they're cdrom based and
slow, but do have an IDE controller on the via motherboard so adding a 2.5
disk would make it a pretty reasonable small machine...I believe scott and
company are using then as thin clients for the LTSP stuff...

/brian chee


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-----Original Message-----
From: luau-bounces at lists.hosef.org [mailto:luau-bounces at lists.hosef.org] On
Behalf Of Jim Thompson
Sent: Wednesday, December 27, 2006 9:47 PM
To: LUAU
Subject: Re: [LUAU] Anyone use a Linksys NSLU2? USB hard disk drives are
FOSSfriendly?


On Dec 27, 2006, at 6:33 PM, R. Scott Belford wrote:

> Jim Thompson wrote:
>
>> You might conclude that I'm considering building a product around  
>> all this.   About 70% of what I'm thinking is in this thread
>>>> http://www.intel.com/design/servers/storage/ss4000-E/
>
> This runs a Linux kernel.  Is it a m0no0wall derivative rather than  
> being based on freeNAS?

Yes, the product I pointed to, *as shipped*, runs linux.

You can think of 'm0n0wall' as a specialized FreeBSD "distro" for  
networking hardware.    FreeNAS is a 'spin' of m0n0wall focused on  
supporting fileservers, rather than routers/firewalls/Access Points.

For this application, I prefer FreeBSD over Linux.  There are many  
reasons.

For one thing, the ZFS support is further along, and Linux's "FUSE"  
architecture (necessary to adopt ZFS on linux, because ZFS isn't  
(yet?) licensed under a GPL-compatible license, so FUSE is used to  
keep the ZFS code in user-space), is never going to be 'fast'.

For another, FreeBSD's "Geom" architecture, so GELI and GDBE become  
options.   Now if you note that I explained that I'd found a board  
with an on-board HiFn crypto accelerator, (one that just happens to  
already be supported by FreeBSD's "crypt' framework (supported by  
GELI)), you can probably put the pieces together.  :-)   GELI also  
has some interesting 'features' that allow me to market a key  
recovery service.

Putting FreeBSD, ZFS (and a variant of FreeNAS) on the product  
involves some work, its true.

But I think I get a better product out of it than just sticking  
FreeNAS on a PC.

And remember, the hardware I'm buying is identical to that marketed  
by Intel, but I don't pay Intel's "uplift" (nor the channel margin)  
seen in the $560 price.

Jim
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