Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
25-30W ish!I just saw your post on Reddit. Do you have any idea of the wattage draw the rig has out of interest?
Also on Cerberus is that a FTTPoD install or business?
Thats a lot lot lower than I was expecting, did you use a wattage plug or just what the devices/motherboard reports back?25-30W ish!
FTTPoD install
Just a standard 11th Gen without a GPU, tends to draw somewhere in the region of 30W with a decent PSU. No measurements, just 40 years of experience.Thats a lot lot lower than I was expecting, did you use a wattage plug or just what the devices/motherboard reports back?
I had been tempted to get FTTPoD myself but the r100 program started and covered me although its being a total PITA willing for it to finish so I can order.
Online searches confirm 11th gen PowerEdge's will run 30 to 35W when running as a router. Just got a R210II to run opnsense and I might put a powermeter on it when the notion arises.Just a standard 11th Gen without a GPU, tends to draw somewhere in the region of 30W with a decent PSU. No measurements, just 40 years of experience.
Those are really nice numbers.Online searches confirm 11th gen PowerEdge's will run 30 to 35W when running as a router. Just got a R210II to run opnsense and I might put a powermeter on it when the notion arises.
Can you sustain 900 Mbps with that Celeron over PPPoE?interesting, I'm running a Celeron 847 with Pfsense & Aquiss (Entanet) 9000/100 FTTP (PPPoE) the manual reckons about 7w loaded (5 when idle) though I've not measured it as yet.
to my surprise, yes. (though I only see those speeds on speed tests), when testing it sits at around 50% CPU usage (as reported on the dashboard).Can you sustain 900 Mbps with that Celeron over PPPoE?
You can always get yourself a USB-to-SATA adapter, take the drive out and plug it in somewhere else - unless you have some complex multi-drive RAID setup of course.I have an R415 dual Opteron I'm afraid to even start to recover some files from.. That exercise would cost me a few bucks. )
I have two of those, maxed to 8GB RAM, running as monitoring servers with separate lxd containers for each software tool. Good enough for the job, and very cheap to run.My current router is a very old Intel Nuc DN2820FYKH, 7W TDP, with Debian. Does everything I need, AES in hardware would have been nice, but hey, can't have it all.
That is the case indeed.You can always get yourself a USB-to-SATA adapter, take the drive out and plug it in somewhere else - unless you have some complex multi-drive RAID setup of course.
Indeed, very nice, good thing you got 2 of them. If mine fails I'm fscked. I should set up a Rpi as standby.I have two of those, maxed to 8GB RAM, running as monitoring servers with separate lxd containers for each software tool. Good enough for the job, and very cheap to run.
Currently VLANs on a switch, this gives me more flexibility. I do have a few USB ethernet adapters from past adventures.I gather they're a bit hard to buy at the moment.
If you're using the DN2820 as a router, are you doing "router on a stick" with VLANs into a switch? Or do you have a USB-ethernet adapter for the second interface? Or some other trick?
I reckon no more than 200 Mbps. Maybe wireguard could be a bit faster.Curious what sort of openvpn client speeds you'd get with that setup.