Re: A single-board computer for NetBSD

2016-11-19 Thread Andy Ruhl
On Sat, Nov 19, 2016 at 8:44 AM, Thor Lancelot Simon wrote: > On Sat, Nov 19, 2016 at 12:59:14PM +0100, Martin Husemann wrote: >> >> If you can use serial instead of VGA and don't mind running -current, >> the ERLITE Edge Router 3 is a more or less plug & play solution (though >>

Re: A single-board computer for NetBSD

2016-11-19 Thread coypu
On Sat, Nov 19, 2016 at 11:56:14AM -0800, Hal Murray wrote: > > co...@sdf.org said: > > There is some bug with rpi's USB causing hangs, so I wouldn't recommend > > heavy use of it right now. > > Is that specific to the rpi? The chip on the rpi? ... > > If it's specific to the chip on the

Re: A single-board computer for NetBSD

2016-11-19 Thread Hal Murray
co...@sdf.org said: > There is some bug with rpi's USB causing hangs, so I wouldn't recommend > heavy use of it right now. Is that specific to the rpi? The chip on the rpi? ... If it's specific to the chip on the rpi, it might be easier to debug on a PC. Also a rpi might work if you use 2

Re: A single-board computer for NetBSD

2016-11-19 Thread jgw
Martin Cermak wrote: > I think of creating a simple router for home use with NetBSD. > Just for fun. I imagine a single board printed circuit with > passive cooling, with 2+ 100+ Mbit/s ethernet ports and maybe > a vga port too. A Raspberry Pi sort of thing, but maybe not >

Re: A single-board computer for NetBSD

2016-11-19 Thread Thor Lancelot Simon
On Sat, Nov 19, 2016 at 12:59:14PM +0100, Martin Husemann wrote: > > If you can use serial instead of VGA and don't mind running -current, > the ERLITE Edge Router 3 is a more or less plug & play solution (though > from a NetBSD POV not 100% finished and stable yet, but getting better > quickly).

Re: A single-board computer for NetBSD

2016-11-19 Thread Martin Husemann
On Sat, Nov 19, 2016 at 04:14:32AM +0100, Martin Cermak wrote: > I think of creating a simple router for home use with NetBSD. > Just for fun. I imagine a single board printed circuit with > passive cooling, with 2+ 100+ Mbit/s ethernet ports and maybe > a vga port too. If you can use serial

Re: A single-board computer for NetBSD

2016-11-19 Thread Jukka Marin
On Fri, Nov 18, 2016 at 11:18:13PM -0500, Eric Garver wrote: > On Sat, Nov 19, 2016 at 04:14:32AM +0100, Martin Cermak wrote: > > Hello guys, > > > > I think of creating a simple router for home use with NetBSD. > > Just for fun. I imagine a single board printed circuit with > > passive cooling,

Re: A single-board computer for NetBSD

2016-11-19 Thread Andreas Krey
On Fri, 18 Nov 2016 22:28:44 +, Hal Murray wrote: ... > The low cost approach is to plug a USB Ethernet adapter into something like a > Raspberry Pi. That may not be good enough if you are after high throughput > but it's probably good enough since you only asked for 100 megabit.