Linux Ported to Cisco Routers, BSD chosen by router manufacturers 174
calc writes "Linux has now been ported to the Cisco 2500/3000/4000 routers. Click here for more details." This seems like a fairly logical (albeit not so useful hack). I mean, one would assume that cisco's have some wacky hardware in them... but then again, using standard tools to config them seems allright by me. And you could use your router as a web server if you were on crack *grin*. [Update by nik]: Not the first time a free operating system is used like this. For example, routers from Juniper run a modified FreeBSD, while Effnet base many of their products on NetBSD.
Finally! (Score:1)
(What an effective use of resources
I think, therefor i think. i think?
Re:Ending of the Linux to everything..... (Score:1)
Share and Enjoy.
Webserver on Router? Not such a bad idea... (Score:1)
If you're running a webserver cluster behind the router, and using the router itself to do the load balancing (IANASA - I am not a Sys Admin), then if all the dedicated webserving machines decide to go bye-bye on you, it would be a Nice Thing to be able to have the router throw out a "Sorry, our stuff is unavailable right now" message. Not that you should let the aforementioned state occur, but as the saying goes, 'better safe than dead.'
Re:This is great! (Score:1)
Re:This is great! (Score:1)
Re:There are problems with IOS (Score:1)
Re:Not Usefull as all... (Score:1)
BSD runs on the P200 that manages the box. Like the ssh session you might use to configure it. ASICs handle the packet forwarding, route table, forwards table, etc. No matter how cool BSD is, it still doesn't push an OC-192 at wire speed. Moderate that guy down like the uninformed bastard that he is.
kashani
Re:Linux on Cisco (Score:1)
just think - so long as the unit performs its duties and does not invite administrator scrutiny, you now have the perfect base for sniffing and password logging.
how many more reasons do we need before all those old cleartext application protocols get scrapped?
Re:This is great! (Score:1)
1. Linux *does* allow multiple port matching.
2. Linux *does* allow you to redirect to another machine, you are no longer restricted to localhost (under 2.2 you can as well with 3rd party utils which I hated because they sucked.)
3. Host mapping is *not* a problem under 2.4
(I know how useful the redirection can be, that DNS task of yours would be hell without it.)
4. Connection State Matching is possible in Linux.
5. Rate blocking: I *think* so. I would have to look a bit more before being able to say for sure though... the limit match helps on this, but I don't think it does what you wanted it to - but there may be something else.
To help, here is a simple list on the basic options included in the "make menuconfig" under 2.4 for NAT/filtering/MASQ decisions:
limit match, MAC, netfilter MARK, multiple port support, TOS match, connection state match, unclean match, owner match
Packet Filtering Targets: REJECT, MIRROR
Full NAT Targets: MASQUERADE, REDIRECT
Packet Mangling: TOS, MARK
In summary, I know about the limitations you were discussing - at least in regards to the 2.2 series. What I would like to know, is what does *BSD have over the 2.4 Linux Kernel (which I have running on 7 production machines WITHOUT a single hickup) with regards to router functionality?
I should also point out that though I am a fan of Linux, I would use Win2k before I would use RedHat and I believe in using the best tools for the job at hand. (Yes, even if the best tool is Win95 or FreeBSD *shudder*)
So, once again, anyone want to please explain why someone would use OpenBSD over Linux (to clarify, 2.4) as a router? (please avoid the security arguments, that's a whole different can of worms.)
-Nathan
Whose standard? (Score:2)
Standard as in what is most familiar to yourself? -- As in non-cisco? By many Cisco peoples' standards, the Operating System and the configuration tools are the "standard" for cisco routers.
<request for clarification/>
Foundry Networking supports SSH (Score:1)
Cisco IOS vs. Linux (Score:2)
Re:How about the competition? (Score:1)
Re:Linux on this, linux on that (Score:2)
There's a huge difference there.
SETI? (Score:2)
QNX = Posix? (Score:1)
So the port should have been trivial.
I think that being able to run perl scripts on a router is a cool side effect of this hack though.
Or could you do it previously? Anyone?
Re:I'd like to see IOS on x86 (Score:2)
Newer models moved away from general purpose CPUs to proprietary chips designed for fast routing/switching.
Re:Linux on Cisco (Score:1)
This flamebait? Seems like a basic question as to any advantages...
Abut the HTTP server (Score:2)
Better than a 486 (Score:2)
I've played a bit with getting ucLinux running on older Bay/Wellfleet AN routers. They are basically a system on a chip (68EN360) with some RAM and flash. It's a project for another day, though.
Woohooo! (Score:1)
Anyway, real men use Foundry. ;>
Well Hell.... (Score:2)
Go Slackware!
-- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
Re:Yes, you are buying the Cisco name. (Score:1)
Re:ableit no so useful ??!?!? (Score:1)
Can your Cisco IOS based router/firewall redirect traffic through arbitrary software or filters on the router itself, that you can code yourself in C? Think about it, man. For a custom solution, Linux is infinitely more flexible. You can damn near do anything with a packet if you have the coding knowledge to take a whack at it. IOS is a closed environment.
THAT's what I meant, and I do know what I'm talking about
Re:FYI (Score:1)
I still consider simple masquerading and true NAT different, although they are fundamentally the same thing.
I know IOS supports these things, but if it it ain't in IOS, you can't do it, it's a closed environment. In linux, my NAT could also scan packet contents of outbound SMTP traffic, and filter certain packets containing certain data through an external chunk of C code on the router itself that I wrote before processing it onwards... for a really wierd example (and yes, I've done that before).
Re:QNX (Score:1)
Re:I'd like to see IOS on x86 (Score:1)
It ran on a pc but allowed you to setup your linux box with IOS syntax. You could setup any service that linux would run - and it was just like being in a router.... (had a whole boat load of cool things like setting up VOIP calling gateways etc.) and it is to be sold as a development tool - so anyone can create an IOS interface for what they run on linux.
anyway - its coming soon. will see if I can getthe name of it again.
Re:QNX (Score:1)
Ah, I was thinking of the PIX 515.
I think the 506 is also a p200 though.
Linux on Cisco (Score:1)
Re:this is my (Score:1)
12?
Linux Routers already in use (Score:1)
firewall, I don't see why they shouldn't do it.
Re:SETI? (Score:1)
On the routers listed, your contribution would be minimal at best. These boxes have fairly slow old 680[c]30's in 'em.
Though I bet some of the MIPS processors used in the 7x00 series would do a fine job...
-LjM
What's make? (Score:1)
Re:This is great! (Score:1)
The Cisco IOS can also translate inside AND outside addresses, do port address translation (like MASQUERADING). As for a "range of addresses", like a 1-to-1 mapping 10.1.x.x to 20.1.x.x, I know the PIX is capable of doing that; I can't vouch for IOS (but it would seem like a logical extension they have). But you can create a global pool of addresses.
I work with cisco routers every day. They're the best in the industry for features and performance. But this linux-on-router thing is still cool.
--
John Kramer
Ending of the Linux to everything..... (Score:2)
Re:ableit no so useful ??!?!? (Score:1)
woo hoo! (Score:5)
"MY cisco runs redhat!"
"oh yeah? my cisco runs slackware!"
"hah! amateurs! mine runs turbo!"
Re:Linux on Cisco (Score:1)
Crack smoking sys admins (Score:1)
- Mike Hughes
Re:turnabout is fair play (Score:2)
turnabout is fair play (Score:4)
If we can use IP over DNS [slashdot.org], http over routers seems reasonable.
I'm holding out for SSH over my toaster.
-Waldo
-------------------
Re:Intel HW inside Cisco PIX firewalls (Score:1)
If you put a terminal on the PIX's console port and watch what it does when it boots. The first thing you will notice is that it's a Phoenix BIOS modified to a) use a serial port instead of a VGA board, b) boot the OS from flash memory. It also identifies it's CPU at that point (in the PIX-515 it actually a Pentium 200 MMX) - that's why I'm kind of surprised that you were surprised to find it was just a really expensive Intel PC. It tells you what it is, you just have to listen :).
As an aside, I did try to put the PIX 4-port ethernet card into a normal PC. Linux identified it as 4 Intel EEpro adapters. I didn't try to see if it would actually work.
Hmm, an unoptimized OS on expensive hardware, why? (Score:4)
Of course, a 486 running Freesco [freesco.org], a Linux derived firewall router, would probably have better performance and be far cheaper, but it's not as hackworthy.
Next week, a Linux router/firewall on a wristwatch, but you can't move your arm or your network will go down.
Re:QNX (Score:2)
Depends on the model, many Cisco routers use Motorola 680x0 chips, some MIPS...
I can't recall any off the top of my head that used x86 family chips.
-LjM
Re:I'd like to see IOS on x86 (Score:3)
Not Usefull as all... (Score:2)
It has no use....
The Linux tcp/ip stack is not up to the job of high end routing ( even for these low end routers )
If you want an os that can handle high loads of routing, why not use what the best performing router uses... ( juniper networks M series )...
WHat is that you ask? well, FreeBSD of course....
Yeah, i know, this will get marked as flamebait, but, does it look like i care?
Re:QNX (Score:1)
Mistakes and wrong assumptions here. For the hardware platform, it depends which one. Most routers architectures are based on Motorola 68xxx for low-end (2500's) or any kind of MIPS-based CPU for higher grade routers.
And IOS is NOT QNX, and doesn't use QNX in any way. It didn't say so in the press release, I'm telling you so now. Whatever is Cisco doing with QNX is confidential at this point :)
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Security? What does anyone really know about the security of Cisco routers? Are you sure that there are no back doors imbedded in the IOS? Can you prove it?
At least with Linux, you can.
Re:Hmm, an unoptimized OS on expensive hardware, w (Score:1)
Juniper's FreeBSD is rewritten for performance... (Score:1)
Have a look at the Junipe r White Paper [juniper.net] about JunOS. Yes, it's FreeBSD, but the TCP/IP stack was completely gutted and replaced. If you go through the paper, there are a number of other areas where it differs from standard FreeBSD, too.
I'm a FreeBSD fan, but I'm interested in the truth, too!
Also, don't forget that Juniper do contribute stuff back to the FreeBSD code base even though they don't give the whole OS away for free. Which they couldn't do with a GPL-licensed piece of software.
-Dom
Re:ableit no so useful ??!?!? (Score:1)
Re:ableit no so useful ??!?!? (Score:1)
uClinux-cisco-log.txt [krux.org]
Re:No need for Cisco certification (Score:1)
Re:Yes, you are buying the Cisco name. (Score:1)
"I can say that I am not aware of anyone designing or building hardware for cisco other than cisco."
Jeez... you're not AWARE of that happening? Well I guess that means it can't be happening then, right?
-thomas
"Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence."
Re:ableit no so useful ??!?!? (Score:1)
Re:Yes, you are buying the Cisco name. (Score:2)
Again, don't put words in my mouth. I said D-Link "builds a lot of the hardware for Cisco." Had I wanted to imply that Cisco re-sells D-Link routers, I would have said, "D-Link builds Cisco routers, and Cisco sells them."
PMC-Sierra also builds hardware for Cisco, as well as other companies. Obviously if D-Link was able to actually manufacture an entire router themselves, they would not be selling them to Cisco, they'd be selling them direct to companies.
Talk about a feeb... sheesh.
-thomas
"Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence."
Re:ableit no so useful ??!?!? (Score:1)
What about the network security implications... (Score:2)
Re:The USB radio (Score:2)
Re:Yes, you are buying the Cisco name. (Score:2)
You're also buying Cisco software and design (Score:2)
By contrast, when you buy a Cisco router, you're mainly buying IOS and the design of the hardware - manufacturing's less important.
Re:I'd like to see IOS on x86 (Score:2)
More realistically, it can run custom queuing with minimal CPU loads (very nice for allocating bandwidth to high priority applications, i.e. class of service/QoS), unlike some older high-end routers.
It has some backplane improvements over the older 7200s, so it's not just a matter of CPU speed and cache.
Re:I'd like to see IOS on x86 (Score:2)
The cheapest routers to run IOS are the 800 series, I believe (but watch out for exactly which features are implemented, some low end feature packs are missing surprising stuff).
Hack Value. Used Cisco 2500s on EBay (Score:2)
Re:He He He He =:-) (Score:2)
It's useful. (Score:2)
1) Cisco hardware is extremely trustworthy, much more so than the generic PC. Good telecommunications equipment (routers, muxes, DSUs)will run for decades in poorly ventilated dusty closets without any hardware maintenance at all.
2) Router hardware boots fast. WAY fast. Iff it has a decent operating system. This is important in real life because even UPSes are really uninteruptable.
3) Routers (though not the 2500) typically have ridiculously fast RAM for packet buffering. If linux can get Cisco-7000 class throughput on Pentium III hardware, think what it could do on a real router!
4) All software can become obsolete, due to lack of compatability with the real world (what do you mean we need NAT? We didn't need it yesterday!) or penetration (huh? our version of IOS is vulnerable to a script that's all over the net?) or various other reasons. Router software updates are EXPENSIVE!!! Trust me, I have "SmartNet Maintenance" from Cisco not because the hardware ever fails (it doesn't) but because it gives me access to the IOS download site for a single yearly fee. Linux updates are FREE.
The last reason is the most compelling, obviously. Money talks, linux walks, er, runs.
--Charlie
Re:turnabout is fair play (Score:2)
of attracting positive moderation. By the time you've got to +50,
hopefully you've proved yourself to be a house-trained member of the
\. community, and so your only concern should be making posts that you
think others would be interested in reading.
That said, the current system is bizarre: I had a recent post [slashdot.org]
that attracted a fair amount of moderation (as RMS criticisms do),
which, although it received net positive moderation, knocked by karma
down 4 points. Suggestion: instead of changing the way moderation is
done, simply change the way it is displayed: if you have over 50 karma
just show ">50".
Re:Yes, you are buying the Cisco name. (Score:2)
but its for certain that dlink is NOT a build shop. that was my only point.
--
Re:SETI? (Score:2)
A Cisco 2500 is what, a 20MHz 68030? Lotsa spare cycles there....
Re:turnabout is fair play (Score:2)
A quest for respect is in fact the reason we do most things. It doesn't actually benifit us any to post our ideas to slashdot except we somehow gain pleasure out of the thought we will convince others of the validity of our positions. It is a similar desire for respect which drives altruism and other nice things in local communities (and some people who are just truly good).
The internet however presents a medium where our contact with others is so fleeting (i.e. there are so many people we may interact with an entierly differnt set of people today aw we did yesterday) that traditional methods of accumulating respect (people remember what you said before and gauge your current statements by it) aren't as efficent. To this end karma sort of serves as a cybernetic enhancement of these notions of respect...a limited one dimensional sort of group respect. Therefore by limiting karma at 50 you probably reduce the incentive for many people to post informative useful opinions.
On the other hand just as you might have the con man manufacturing fake respect in the real world you might have karma whore using multiple accounts or other moderation schemes to falsely gain karma.
Re:What about the network security implications... (Score:2)
I almost hate to say this, but if someone is able to
Re:What about the network security implications... (Score:2)
Linux kernel a better router then IOS. (Score:2)
The 5xxx series falls down above 200mbit/sec in the fastest forward-only mode.
You know, I'm of two minds on this... (Score:5)
I've seen alot of truely, ahhh, stunning, ports of Linux over the last couple of years. Wristwatches, toasters, etc. all seem to attract the attention and adoration of linux porters.
Now, what I'm seeing here is I think a conflict between two fundamental hacker tenants:
What I guess I'm worried about is that I tend to see the over-emphasis on the first (especially amongst the younger of us), and the slighting of the second.
Yeah, there might be good, personal reasons for the above people to have ported Linux to Cisco. However, I'm not particularly happy that people tend to glorify these hackers and look down on the ones who might be (for instance) writing neat ASP scripts to talk to MS SQL servers from IIS.
Fundamentally, I'm worried that in our zeal to promote Linux and Free Software, we run into the "Round Peg, Square Hole" syndrome (or, the "If all you have is a hammer, everything starts to look like a nail" problem).
I guess what I'd like to see us as a community do is to place more value on doing the job right, which means using the appropriate tools (or, if there truely aren't good ones available, writing the correct thing), rather than spend time on things that in the end, are almost useless (other than perhaps educational use).
Feeling a bit crotchity today...
-Erik
Your prayers are sort of answered (Score:2)
Finally, a use for my old Cisco router! (Score:2)
README and INSTALL (Score:2)
INSTALL is 13164 bytes [virtualave.net]
README is 254 bytes [virtualave.net]
linux.bin is 1071900 bytes
uClinux-c2500-uClinux-2_0_38_1pre7.diff is 4351814 bytes
Wristwatches, Routers and what next?
Personally I like the idea of being able to hack anything you want into the router....let it be FREE, but I wonder at the potential havoc that could be caused by bugs in these if it ever adopted in volume (what's cisco's record like at security and bug fixing and will any GPL/OS solution be any better)? I also agree with a previous poster that Cisco are not going to be happy with this if it is viable for production systems. I can forsee the DoJ anti-trust case where Cisco are taken to task for hacking their routers and engaging in anti-competitive practices to maintain their monopoly.....oh dear, somethings never change.
Re:Linux on Cisco (Score:2)
Many network-statistics gathering programs require support from routers. The most notable of these is NetFlow, which is a very compute-intensive traffic aggregation tool run on Cisco routers. The router has to keep track of every packet stream pasing through it, and routinely send information to a collector. This is a pretty powerful feature; Combine NetFlow with cflowd (www.caida.org), write a short little program to parse cflowd's output, and you know instantly how much network traffic you have, where it's coming from, where it's going, when it happened, what ports it crossed, total stream size, total packets sent, hop count and propagation delay. You can even expand this: With intelligent use of NetFlow and a little hacking, you can find out what protocols are running across your network, detect some types of malicious intrusion, and even throttle-back (or shutdown entirely) the network usage of some applications. Yes, there is a way to fix the network saturation problems around the widespread use of Napster - A way that doesn't involve legislation.
All this is made possible /because/ routers have an operating system. Throw linux on them, and now you have a 'standard' platform, instead of CiscoOS or AIX, depending on the router.
Intelligent routers are a very good thing - Think about the crazy caching schemes you could run if you could simply write a little C, rather than fabbing some new hardware.
Re:I'd like to see IOS on x86 (Score:2)
Not to be obnoxious, but the 3640 isn't a totally low-end router (four slots) and its running an IDT-licensed version of the MIPS R4000 processor. From the datasheet at IDT [idt.com] it appears to be just another general purpose CPU, not one dedicated to routing functions. I'm well aware that the really high-end products (like the 75xx series) have much more specialized route interface processors that handle routing, fast switching, and so on that PC architecture would be hard to handle. But I'd still like to see how many packets IOS running as the sole process on a 1Ghz PIII with a dozen 100Mbit full duplex interfaces (on 64 bit PCI cards @ 66Mhz) could forward. The biggest advantage wouldn't be for situations where you needed specific functions or capbilities, like load balancing across interfaces or aggregating interfaces -- best to buy the right hardware. Where I see the advantage is cheap, fast CPUs and cheap RAM.
Re:This is great! (Score:2)
I'm currently employed in moving all the IPs in a class B, and OpenBSD's NAT capability has been invaluable in moving DNS servers and the like.
In terms of ipfilter, ipf can keep state. That's the biggest thing. I think linux allows you to firewall based on any part of the packet, but ipfilter allows you to implement rules than consider multiple packets: e.g. ipfilter was able to filter the recent stream.c DoS, by blocking ACKs that didn't belong to a session in progress. You could also, for example, block all ICMP above a certain rate. AFAIK IOS' ability to filter is limited to port and ip address.
Now, the Cisco PIX does have a NAT capability and probably has more thorough filtering capacity. But I don't know too much about it.
Finally, I should point out that I am very much a Linux fan. I run linux at home. But if you're looking for a powerful router, OpenBSD is where it's at. Secure and functional. But I wouldn't want to run it as a workstation, and mabye not even a server -- after all, it dosen't even come with emacs!
Re:Apropos of nothing, I suppose... (Score:2)
Oh my god, I have an old Gandalf ISDN modem sitting in my closet somewhere. I bought it for $3.00, and only because I like the LCD screen's diagnostics.
WHat's this thing worth?
-- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
The USB radio (Score:2)
First of all, it should have come with AM support.
Second of all, why didn't they design it so that the audio is sent over the USB connection as well? There's plenty of bandwidth available. I mean, what exactly is the point of having a USB cable on the thing when you have to plug the other cable into "Line In" to get it to work???
Yeah, I found it hard to believe they make million dollar cisco router hardware once I bought that piece of crap...
-thomas
"Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence."
Re:No need for Cisco certification (Score:2)
Re:turnabout is fair play (Score:2)
Yes, you are buying the Cisco name. (Score:3)
One time he installed a cable modem for a suit from D-Link. He asked me dad what he thought of D-Link products. My dad stated that he honestly thought of them as "generic" or low-end hardware.
The guy laughed... then he told my dad that D-Link actually builds a lot of the hardware for Cisco. Not the cheap routers either
You are paying for the Cisco name.
-thomas
"Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence."
This is great! (Score:2)
What would really be cool would be to see one of the BSDs (preferably OpenBSD) ported to these Ciscos. Then I could take advantage of the full functionality of ipnat and ipfilter, which are much more powerful than anything Cisco or Linux has to offer.
Hmm, OpenBSD runs on an m68k. I wonder how much effort it would take to make this work....
My dreams have been answered (Score:4)
-B
QNX (Score:3)
--
Re:Linux on Cisco (Score:2)
X toolkits. Bring 'em on. The more the better.
Linux on this, linux on that (Score:2)
No need for Cisco certification (Score:3)
If Cisco routers ran Linux, then no one would have to waste their time getting Cisco certified and Cisco wouldn't be able to make a mint training them. Somehow I don't think Cisco is going to think Linux on their routers is such a good idea.
Re:Yes, you are buying the Cisco name. (Score:2)
your d-link rumor is pure falsehood...
--
Um, actually, NO (Score:2)
There are problems with IOS (Score:2)
When brought to Cisco's attention, it was ignored. Then, all of a sudden, Cisco 1700/2900/5k/5500/6000 series switches don't support bridge tables anymore.
There are other issues as well that I have identified, such as ISL trunks leaking un-encapsulated packets into a trunk, and certain plain packet header patterns (for example netbios browsing) triggering the multicast ISL interface (multicast, all interfaces on the trunk process it)to trigger Spanning-Tree recaluclations, which causes the interface to go dead for: 2 * maxforward_delay + hello_time. Unless of course you have portfast/nodefast enabled (Which is Cisco's *extension* of 802.1d/q) whereby when this happens, all ports on Vlan1 (all designated bridges) flood while spanning-tree is recalculated.
This basically turns your entire broadcast domain into one HUGE repeater. lol
There's more. Point is, statements like that, which are unfounded aren't much use to anyone.
Every OS has problems, and IOS is no exception.
Anonymous on purpose.
Apropos of nothing, I suppose... (Score:2)
Since I was busy at the time writing an automated test tool that ran on a network of Linux computers (SLS 1.03, installed from 5.25" floppies), I thought it was cool that I was using a free operating system to test stuff that had been cross compiled on a free compiler.
--
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Of course not. That isn't my point.
My point is:
One is possible to verify.
One is impossible to verify.
Intel HW inside Cisco PIX firewalls (Score:2)
We have one of the older, boxy Cisco PIX 50x firewalls. We have three ethernet ports on the box, and originally, 32 meg RAM. We had never opened the box for any reason before. Who knew what we could screw up on such an expensive piece of equipment? One day, we were messing around with the thing via telnet, and I discovered that the machine is actually an Intel P2-266 box! We immediately cracked the box open, to discover that there really was a full-size pentium II chip in the damn thing! What's even funnier is that the fan on the chip was Unplugged! The heatsink was burning hot to touch, since the machine had been running like this for approximately four months with no downtime. Needless to say, I reconnected the fan to the mobo.
Let's describe the interior. We have a standard Intel motherboard, cicso-labed RAM, no HD, a floppy plugged into the floppy controller, two NIC's, and the PIX card itself. All of the "special" pix IOS resides on this single ISA card. If this wasn't so damn expensive, I would have plugged the card into one of our older servers to see if what would happen. has anyone tried this? Also, there is the standard monitor port, etc. etc. on the mobo. I didn't try plugging in a display, because that would have involved dismounting the board from the box, and I don't think Cisco would have liked that. Anyway, the serial ports on the unit are actually routed into the COM ports on the mainboard via cables routed around the inside of the case.
Now, have any of you ever seen the price of a RAM upgrade for one of these? Cisco wanted $900 for an upgrade to 128. Taking a leap of faith, I grabbed two dimms out of a box I had lying around in the office, and stuck them in the PIX. These were, by the way, cheap kingston, run-of-the-mill dimms that cost maybe $60 each. We restarted the monster, and waited about a minute for a telnet connection. Nothing happened. We powered it down, and removed the new RAM and rebooted. We timed the startup, and added the new RAM in again. It turns out that the delay was due to the BIOS POSTing the new RAM! The machine came up with no problems at all, and identified its new total amount of RAM with no problems.
Has anyone tried anything more daring with a PIX?
Also, if anyone has a broken pix, please e-mail me! gunnar@midsouth.rr.com.nospam
--
Michael C. Hollinger
ePeople Mentor and Support Provider
Please see my certifications at http://www.brainbench.com/transcript.jsp?pid=7417
Forget running a web server... (Score:2)
Let's get the ISPs to run Quake Servers! That's the way to reduce latency; run it right at the router level!
--
Re:Ok, i gotta say it... (Score:2)
you'll be able to ssh into the router.
Of course I remember something about Cisco starting to bundle ssh into IOS, but I don't know if its there yet.
I'd like to see IOS on x86 (Score:5)
I'd be interested to see what kind of performance you could get out of IOS on x86, anyway -- are we really buying cool hardware with expensive routers, or just the Cisco name?