FreeBSD on the RaspberryPi 3
Ganbold Tsagaankhuu
ganbold at gmail.com
Tue Mar 1 11:04:17 UTC 2016
On Tue, Mar 1, 2016 at 7:02 PM, Lars Engels <lars.engels at 0x20.net> wrote:
> On Tue, Mar 01, 2016 at 05:00:16PM +0800, Ganbold Tsagaankhuu wrote:
>> On Tue, Mar 1, 2016 at 1:24 PM, Jim Thompson <jim at netgate.com> wrote:
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> > -- Jim
>> >> On Feb 29, 2016, at 10:37 PM, Brett Glass <brett at lariat.net> wrote:
>> >>
>> >> At 09:03 PM 2/29/2016, Bernd Walter wrote:
>> >>
>> >>> I think the most interesting point about this board is that it is
>> >>> a rather inexpensive arm64.
>> >>
>> >> I'm still waiting for a board in this category that has 2 GbE
>> >> ports... or even one GbE port that can really, really run flat out
>> >> at full capacity so that I could multiply it into more ports via a
>> >> VLAN switch. Combined with the FreeBSD IP stack, this could be
>> >> SUPER-useful.
>> >
>> > This one has 3x GigEnet. One is connected to a switch, one to an SFP
>> > cage, one to a RJ45. http://i.imgur.com/4CUMXyv.jpg
>> >
>> > It doesn't run FreeBSD, yet, but Semihalf just checked in a lot of
>> > work in for the SoC in Dec/Jan. So maybe soon. I don't plan to work
>> > on it much before returning from AsiaBSDCon 2016.
>> >
>> > This one (the one in front) is basically a Beaglebone Black: http://i.imgur.com/plk1Iaf.jpg
>>
>> Nice. I wish there could be an ARM board (with 2-3 Ethernet ports
>> (Gigabit or Fast Ethernet)) which costs less than 100$, maybe 50$-60$
>> but powerful and fast enough to do some SSL encryption/decryption for
>> small home network appliance.
>
> The Banana Pi Router Board? http://www.banana-pi.com/eacp_view.asp?id=64
It seemed slow to me and costs more than 60$.
Ganbold
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