Hi David,

> but is it as simple as adding...
> 
> BRIDGE0="eth2 eth3 eth4 eth5"

Yes, you can bridge as many NIC's as you want to br0 .

Personally I prefer to use a switch for such purposes, but if you want to keep 
your UPS load as small as possible for critical stuff ...

Lonnie



> On Jul 9, 2018, at 4:12 AM, David Kerr <da...@kerr.net> wrote:
> 
> So with 6 NIC's I would probably want eth0/eth1 as WAN and WAN failover.  
> Then bridge eth2/3/4/5 into a single br0 interface.  Astlinux comes with 
> support for 3 NIC's and bridges out of the box, but is it as simple as 
> adding...
> 
> BRIDGE0="eth2 eth3 eth4 eth5"
> 
> to user.conf to create the br0, or is there more to it in order to have 
> eth3/4/5 available?
> 
> Thanks
> David
>  
> 
> On Sun, Jul 8, 2018 at 9:32 PM, Lonnie Abelbeck <li...@lonnie.abelbeck.com> 
> wrote:
> You are welcome, Michael.
> 
> > Double the performance of the Q190G4N-S07 which is already fast.
> 
> Actually, the Qotom Q530G6 averages 3.3x the single-core performance compared 
> to the Q190G4N-S07 in my tests.
> 
> > In fact I cant see why I wouldn't just use both of these for all use cases 
> > other than I don't know their reliability.
> 
> Yes, no matter which board vendor you choose there are reliability risks.  At 
> least with Qotom you can afford to have a few spares, and testing is the key.
> 
> Lonnie
> 
> 
> 
> > On Jul 8, 2018, at 6:53 PM, Michael Knill 
> > <michael.kn...@ipcsolutions.com.au> wrote:
> > 
> > Thanks Lonnie. Im looking forward to using it. 
> > Double the performance of the Q190G4N-S07 which is already fast. It should 
> > be able to handle my largest systems no problems at all!
> > In fact I cant see why I wouldn't just use both of these for all use cases 
> > other than I don't know their reliability.
> > 
> > Regards
> > Michael Knill
> > 
> > On 9/7/18, 9:05 am, "Lonnie Abelbeck" <li...@lonnie.abelbeck.com> wrote:
> > 
> >    A newly released hardware description and configuration has been added 
> > to the AstLinux documentation:
> > 
> >    Qotom Q530G6 Core i3-6100U Fanless Appliance
> >    https://doc.astlinux-project.org/userdoc:board_qotom_q530g6
> > 
> >    I personally purchased a Qotom Q530G6 (4G RAM, 32G mSATA SSD, No WiFi) 
> > via AliExpress:
> > 
> >    6 Gigabit Nic Fanless Mini PC Qotom Q530G6 Core i3-6100U ...
> >    
> > https://www.aliexpress.com/item/6-Gigabit-Nic-Fanless-Mini-PC-Qotom-Q530G6-Q550G6-Core-i3-6100U-i5-6200U-1-8Ghz/32890614694.html
> > 
> >    $227.00 USD -- Barebone Q530G6, No WiFi
> > 
> >    $ 61.00 USD -- 4G RAM, 32G mSATA SSD (I added since it uses DDR4 RAM)
> > 
> >    $ 30.00 USD -- Shipping to central USA
> > 
> >    The Qotom Q530G6 is the fastest bare-metal hardware I have tested for 
> > AstLinux, 4.7x single-core performance compared to the legacy Intel Atom 
> > D525 workhorse, and 7.4x single-core performance compared to the PC Engines 
> > APU2.
> > 
> >    The Qotom Q530G6 is about twice the cost of the Qotom-Q190G4N-S07 or PC 
> > Engines APU2.
> > 
> >    Given the performance, the power consumption is surprisingly low, idles 
> > at 6 W, 10 W under load (HDMI disconnected).  And runs cool, coretemp 
> > reports 41 degC CPU and SATA 2.5" SSD reports 43 degC (ambient temp is 26 
> > degC / 79 degF).  The supplied Hoodisk brand mSATA SSD does not report 
> > temp. The case is only barely warm to the touch.
> > 
> >    The Qotom Q530G6 offers everything an AstLinux user wants:
> >    -- Supports Serial or Video (HDMI) Console
> >    -- Supports either mSATA SSD or 2.5" SSD (SATA cable pre-attached)
> >    -- 6x Intel i211 NIC's
> >    -- Fanless, first-class machined aluminum black case
> >    -- Internal piezo buzzer for startup/shutdown sounds.
> >    -- Power button
> > 
> >    The Qotom Q530G6 requires DDR4 RAM, single 260-pin SO-DIMM, 4GB to 16GB 
> > supported.
> > 
> >    No surprise, line-speed 1Gbps network routing and line-speed WireGuard 
> > VPN with headroom.  OpenVPN tested at 310 Mbps.
> > 
> >    I placed my order on a Saturday via AliExpress, it shipped on the 
> > following Tuesday morning and I signed for the package Thursday noon.  
> > Quite amazing !
> > 
> >    Note: Shipped via DHL which required a signature on delivery.
> > 
> >    I like the way a SATA 2.5" SSD is attached (4x screws are supplied) to 
> > the lower cover, somewhat lower temps away from the motherboard.  Currently 
> > on Amazon, "Industrial" 2.5" SATA SSD's (32GB-64GB) are available for 
> > $30-$40 USD.  A 2.5" SSD is a good option for this box.
> > 
> >    In testing I found the Qotom Q530G6's serial port was sensitive to EMI 
> > generated with a dangling (inactive) serial cable, as such it would 
> > sometimes fail to boot properly (hang until cable was removed). Though a 
> > connected (active) serial cable, or no serial cable always booted reliably. 
> >  I retested with a new [1], quality shielded serial cable and that solved 
> > the observed EMI issues with a dangling (inactive) serial cable.  The 
> > original null-modem cable was probably 20 years old that came with a switch 
> > or some other product, and was longer than I needed. EMI on RS232 is 
> > something to keep in mind.
> > 
> >    Clearly there is no one best AstLinux hardware solution, but in my 
> > limited testing, the Qotom Q530G6 is a great fit for AstLinux.
> > 
> >    The Qotom Q530G6 has run solidly for a few days, further updates as 
> > needed.
> > 
> >    Lonnie
> > 
> >    [1] StarTech.com SCNM9FF1MBK 
> > https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00QM8ZP5E/
> > 
> 
> 
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