Home wifi and restricting others' usage
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Joined: Mar 2001
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From: Twickenham, home of rugby
Mike, thanks for Tomato router. Focussing on large corporate IT I haven't come across it.
I admit I would have some wariness in replacing the firmware on my home router, though. If it all goes Pete Tong you are on your tod.
Installing it on an older piece of kit that's out of warranty and you intend to replace anyway - why not.
SD
I admit I would have some wariness in replacing the firmware on my home router, though. If it all goes Pete Tong you are on your tod.
Installing it on an older piece of kit that's out of warranty and you intend to replace anyway - why not.
SD

Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 1,133
Likes: 0
From: Bracknell, Berks, UK
Mike, thanks for Tomato router. Focussing on large corporate IT I haven't come across it.
I admit I would have some wariness in replacing the firmware on my home router, though. If it all goes Pete Tong you are on your tod.
Installing it on an older piece of kit that's out of warranty and you intend to replace anyway - why not.
SD
I admit I would have some wariness in replacing the firmware on my home router, though. If it all goes Pete Tong you are on your tod.
Installing it on an older piece of kit that's out of warranty and you intend to replace anyway - why not.
SD
I run it on an Asus RT-N16 at home, which you can pick up for circa £60, and then with a bit of tweaking you have something that can run with low to mid range Cisco/Juniper kit and has a 140Mbit/s firewall throughput (and a 480mhz chip)
Stick that alongside PFSense, and you've got a pretty impressive firewall range for not much money.
Joined: Aug 2002
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From: Earth
you have something that can run with low to mid range Cisco/Juniper

Tomato is probably better than a cheap Cisco, but better than a Juniper ? No way !
Last edited by mixture; 5th February 2013 at 08:02.

Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 1,133
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From: Bracknell, Berks, UK
Even low-end Juniper kit does more than basic packet filtering .... does your Tomato have any ALGs ? Can your Tomato do "apply-path",candidate configs, "show | compare", "commit confirmed" and rollbacks ? 
Tomato is probably better than a cheap Cisco, but better than a Juniper ? No way !

Tomato is probably better than a cheap Cisco, but better than a Juniper ? No way !

- No
- Not specifically
- It's GUI-configured in the main but has access to the Linux underside for commands if necessary
- See above x2
p.s. - never said it was better

Joined: Mar 2008
Posts: 423
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From: Malvern, UK
I have not read the whole thread, so forgive me if I am repeating something already said.
I have a Netgear router which specifically offers a "guest" WiFi network.This effectively separates your lodgers from your own computers and thus stops any unwanted snooping .
What I am not sure about is if the firewall and URL blocking functions which the router also offers can be configured differently for guest and main users (any guests of mine may be upset to find that they cannot use Tw@tter or Facebook).
I have a Netgear router which specifically offers a "guest" WiFi network.This effectively separates your lodgers from your own computers and thus stops any unwanted snooping .
What I am not sure about is if the firewall and URL blocking functions which the router also offers can be configured differently for guest and main users (any guests of mine may be upset to find that they cannot use Tw@tter or Facebook).
Last edited by Dont Hang Up; 5th February 2013 at 08:32. Reason: For some reason PPrune blocks the correct spelling ofl Tw@tter t

Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 1,133
Likes: 0
From: Bracknell, Berks, UK
I have not read the whole thread, so forgive me if I am repeating something already said.
I have a Netgear router which specifically offers a "guest" WiFi network.This effectively separates your lodgers from your own computers and thus stops any unwanted snooping .
What I am not sure about is if the firewall and URL blocking functions which the router also offers can be configured differently for guest and main users (any guests of mine may be upset to find that they cannot use Tw@tter or Facebook).
I have a Netgear router which specifically offers a "guest" WiFi network.This effectively separates your lodgers from your own computers and thus stops any unwanted snooping .
What I am not sure about is if the firewall and URL blocking functions which the router also offers can be configured differently for guest and main users (any guests of mine may be upset to find that they cannot use Tw@tter or Facebook).




