VyOS is more or less just a router. I'm fairly certain the remote APIs are still coming soon, but it's been a while since I reconfigured one, the advantage is that it's basically an embedded OS that you can backup the JSON config and in an emergency just boot up a new one and upload the config file.
While I'd prefer a hardware router, VyOS does the job, it's monkey-maintainable and you don't need to fill out the requisition forms and do the justification dance for a hardware router with redundancy. I'd personally put pfSense as more of a router distribution than an embedded router OS, but I haven't used it in way too long. On Sat, 5 Oct 2019 at 18:04, David Beveridge <[email protected]> wrote: > On Thu, Oct 3, 2019 at 12:55 PM Rob Thomas <[email protected]> wrote: > >> >> Also, VyOS can be managed by Ansible, which is surprisingly cool. >> https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/modules/vyos_config_module.html >> >> > Actually pfsense can also be configured using ansible > https://github.com/bevhost/ansible-module-pfsense > > I've found pfsense very good for deploying HA Proxy load balancers with > FRR underneath. > The web interface can be configured for access to various functions by > LDAP user groups to manage the services on it. > can VyOS do this? or it just a router? > > dave > > _______________________________________________ > AusNOG mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.ausnog.net/mailman/listinfo/ausnog >
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