I'm running pfSense on an Alix 2d3. The install was pretty flawless.
No wireless, but I did get the Soekris VPN 1411 miniPCI card for
encryption acceleration. It was auto-recognized.

On the other hand, my Asterisk box (pbxinaflash/freepbx) is an Intel
Atom CPU/Board bundle. I needed to install a temporary extra NIC to
download drivers for the Realtek onboard NIC, which was pain because
freepbx's bundled OS, CentOS, gave it the wrong drivers. Kernel panic
on install, then disable the on-board NIC via BIOS, then install extra
NIC, then install correct Realtek drivers, and re-enable the on-board
NIC, remove the extra NIC from the single PCI slot, and install my
Digium Analog card. It has run flawlessly since. (Also replaced my
Vonage & Comcast lines with a generic SIP trunk for about 1/20th my
old monthly bills.) I have no idea if the newer Atom board's onboard
NIC will get recognized correctly in FreeBSD.

The Atom Board has plenty of CPU power, more than the Alix board and
can take more RAM, a hard disk, CDROM, etc. with the right case.

It depends on what you're going to run -- embedded or with room for
add-ons. They're both great.

On Tue, Jan 13, 2009 at 7:26 PM, David Rees <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 13, 2009 at 3:44 PM, Chuck Mariotti <[email protected]> wrote:
>> I have been looking at Atom based systems for a while. I keep drooling over 
>> these cheapo, compact, low power units.
>>
>> I'd really like to replace my 1Ghz, 1GB, 1U machine running pfSense with 
>> one. Are these things supported in pfSense?
>>
>> Is anyone using them or can recommend a board or specific system?
>>
>> I just need dual network/LAN.
>>
>> I have been looking at Jetway and Intel boards.
>>
>> Any suggested configs (and accessories, riser cards, CF, etc...) or 
>> alternatives would be appreciated.
>
> Here ya go:
>
> http://www.netgate.com/product_info.php?cPath=60_84&products_id=671
>
> Alix 6B2 Kit.  2 10/100 NICs, 500MHz Geode processor, 256MB RAM, 512MB
> flash, $180.
>
> All you need to run pfSense. And only draws about 5w from the wall.
>
> Only drawback is that you have to pull the flash card when you want to
> upgrade an embedded system - for my production systems I keep an extra
> flash card around (less than $20) flash that and load it with a config
> backup so that downtime is minimal when upgrading.  Basically as long
> as it takes for you to pull the thing apart and swap out a flash card.
>  If the case had an opening for the flash card it'd be even faster
> (have been tempted to dremel out an opening to make flash card
> swapouts and upgrades extremely quick).
>
> They also make the Alix boards with 3 NICs and you can also load them
> up with a miniPCI wireless card, too if you want that.
>
> -Dave
>
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