Right, considering tomorrow is Sunday, I will be attending Church; considering my religion is Linux, I generally consider doing something cool with it my sermon 
I've got a box that has been sitting here for the past few months, just waiting to be turned into an artifact of pure awesome, and I think that time is nigh. The box is a 700mhz Celery with 256mb RAM and a 20GB (I think) hard drive. What I would like your input on, is what I should use to set this box up. What OS (it is probably gonna be Linux, I'm not in the mood to dust off my rusty BSD skills, I mean it is Sunday, after all), and distribution thereof? I was thinking of going with Slackware, or Ubuntu Server, though I don't quite trust Ubuntu server as of yet. The other option, of course, is Gentoo.
No, I will not touch SuSE, and I will curse you to the ninth circle of Hell for so much as mentioning it. Other possible options are CentOS, however I am a fan of the Debian package-management system (as well as yum and Emerge on Slackware and Gentoo, respectively); I do not like rpms, although I may be inclined to install from source. Any other thoughts on this one?
Also, what should I run on it? Do I go with IPcop, or IP Tables? I am thinking Squid, maybe with a SARG front-end for usage monitoring. Right now I don't see much point in running a mail server as I'm too lazy to set up name servers or dynamic DNS. Also what about routing software? I have several ADSL accounts and I have contemplated just using regular PPPoE connections invoked by custom bash scripts. That way I can keep an eye on International connectivity and if it is lost, accounts will be switched automatically, and I will be notified via email.
The way I see this fitting in to my network is basically by having all internal connections going into one of the eth interfaces on the box, only to be routed out another eth interface, using my Billion router as an ADSL modem.
What are your thoughts on this? Chances are none of you care enough to have read this far, and if you have, I salute you and request your input, as this is Serious Business
I'm off to bed, hopefully I will wake up in the morning to a mound of responses, discussing, in detail the merits and flaws of each Linux distribution in terms of this particular set up, as well as a heated debate about whether to use IPcop or IP Tables.
Chances of this occuring?
Minimal.
Well, g`night
I've got a box that has been sitting here for the past few months, just waiting to be turned into an artifact of pure awesome, and I think that time is nigh. The box is a 700mhz Celery with 256mb RAM and a 20GB (I think) hard drive. What I would like your input on, is what I should use to set this box up. What OS (it is probably gonna be Linux, I'm not in the mood to dust off my rusty BSD skills, I mean it is Sunday, after all), and distribution thereof? I was thinking of going with Slackware, or Ubuntu Server, though I don't quite trust Ubuntu server as of yet. The other option, of course, is Gentoo.
No, I will not touch SuSE, and I will curse you to the ninth circle of Hell for so much as mentioning it. Other possible options are CentOS, however I am a fan of the Debian package-management system (as well as yum and Emerge on Slackware and Gentoo, respectively); I do not like rpms, although I may be inclined to install from source. Any other thoughts on this one?
Also, what should I run on it? Do I go with IPcop, or IP Tables? I am thinking Squid, maybe with a SARG front-end for usage monitoring. Right now I don't see much point in running a mail server as I'm too lazy to set up name servers or dynamic DNS. Also what about routing software? I have several ADSL accounts and I have contemplated just using regular PPPoE connections invoked by custom bash scripts. That way I can keep an eye on International connectivity and if it is lost, accounts will be switched automatically, and I will be notified via email.
The way I see this fitting in to my network is basically by having all internal connections going into one of the eth interfaces on the box, only to be routed out another eth interface, using my Billion router as an ADSL modem.
What are your thoughts on this? Chances are none of you care enough to have read this far, and if you have, I salute you and request your input, as this is Serious Business
I'm off to bed, hopefully I will wake up in the morning to a mound of responses, discussing, in detail the merits and flaws of each Linux distribution in terms of this particular set up, as well as a heated debate about whether to use IPcop or IP Tables.
Chances of this occuring?
Minimal.
Well, g`night