swarm32: (Default)
Well, it turns out my nifty kludge to get namecheap to behave on IPfire got brought into the latest update to the OS.

Now that things have quieted down a bit at work (no datacenter move in progress), I have started work again on a project that I started while a student at NU. A gentoo based, network booting, compile node for the DISTCC system. I'm still in the stage of solidifying and revamping the build process at the moment as a number of the components that I originally used have either been removed, or increased in size significantly. The biggest thing I'm debating on is whether I want to keep using the full init stack from gentoo, or build my own, more compact and less dependent scripts.
swarm32: (stalin kitten)
I finally switched my router distribution from IPCop to IPFire. I was hoping for the 2.0 to become stable of IPCop, but even though SVN/CVS updates are occurring, no real releases have happened. As the last major update to IPCop was mid 2008 and still runs the 2.4 kernel, most newer hardware isn't supported. While my new firewall isn't all that new (Pentium M on an Axiomtek Board) it was running into some oddities with the older IPCop that went away with the much more current IPFire. Also, IPFire has one of the most important addons (for me at least), updateaccelerator built-in from the get-go. It is also more of a standard distribution despite being built from LFS sources, so programs such as Teamspeak3 can be installed on the box without too much difficulty.

Did run into a couple of interesting issues though, one that had a couple of good tutorials, and one that didn't. The easy one was getting the update cache from my old IPCop machine to my new IPFire box.
Yes, it is possible.
A quick, well written refresher on SCP. If you do copy over with SCP, you will need to initiate the copy from the IPFire side, as the SSH in IPCop does not have SCP.

As for issue #2, I use namecheap.com's dynamic DNS service, which IPCop supports but the current build of IPFire does not. Due to the wonderful nature of opensource and IPFire being a less obfuscated IPCop derivative, I was able to kludge together what I needed.
So today I was able to replace a 2.66GHz P4 & an Athlon XP 1800+ machine with a single 1U system running IPFire on a Pentium M. Now to see if my power bill actually goes down at all...

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