On Thu, Dec 22, 2011 at 02:15:40PM +0800, Paul Wise wrote: > I'm looking for a way to replace my current home network infrastructure > with a single device running Debian. I currently have these devices: > > * Siemens SpeedStream 4200. This is an ADSL2+ modem running the > supplied OS. It is running in bridge mode, DSL port plugged into > the wall phone jack via the ADSL splitter and the Ethernet port > is plugged into the Netgear WGR614L router/switch. > * Netgear WGR614L. This is a router, Ethernet switch and WiFi AP, > currently running an old patched up custom build of OpenWRT. Its > WAN port connects to the SpeedStream and talks PPPoE to my ISP > via the SpeedStream. The four Ethernet ports are a switch, > plugged into a PC and the Minitar MVA11A. > * Minitar MVA11A. This is a SIP router with FXO/FXS ports and an > Ethernet port. FXO port plugs into the wall phone jack via the > ADSL splitter, FXS into the cordless phone, Ethernet into the > WGR614L. > * old Panasonic cordless phone > > I'm looking for a single device (to reduce cabling) to replace this: > > * it needs to run Debian or have at least some potential to do > that. I don't want to have to deal with any pre-installed OSes, > custom old OpenWRT builds running Linux 2.4 or other stupidity. > * it needs either FXO/FXS ports or some sort of cordless phone > integrated with it. > * it needs to have ADSL2+ support, > * it needs WiFi, preferably something supported by ath5k/ath9k or > OpenFWWF > * it needs 4 Ethernet ports, speed isn't too important > * it needs to either support coreboot or not be x86 (ARM/MIPS/etc) > * it needs to be unbrickable, via semi-read-only secondary > bootloader or whatever. > * internal SATA or eSATA would be nice so that it has useful > amounts of storage and can be used as a NAS > * a few USB ports would be nice > * some hardware expandability would be nice, miniPCI or whatever
Honestly, that's not realistic. Too weird a combined featureset. Especially the cordless phone bit. A quick search found a Quick Eagle DL710 (never heard of them) which has 3 100Mbit ethernet ports, SIP, ADSL2+, 2 FXS, 1 FXO. That isn't 4 ports though. Almost certainly can't run Debian either. Most APs are way too low in specs to run a full OS. http://www.aceex.com.tw/L3AWVR11.html is another (which has 4 ethernet ports). Neither matches all your requirements, especially for the OS. If you were willing to spend a lot of money on it, you could build a PC that did all that. Sangoma makes FXS/FXO cards and ADSL2+ cards for PCs. -- Len Sorensen -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-arm-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20111222154501.gf27...@caffeine.csclub.uwaterloo.ca