publication croisée depuis : https://lemmy.world/post/448925

Hi there, I was looking for combinations of switching hardware and open source switching software. Stratum and Cumulus Linux caught my attention, but these seem to be focussed towards the industry and would likely be very difficult to run in a homelab. I’m not going to touch the likes of Ubiquity, but as of now the only choice seems to be closed-source software from TPLink and/or Cisco. I’m going to try and harden the inside of my network too with ACLs and any other features I find on the switches, and having an open source OS with regular updates would be very nice to have.

Any suggestions? I was trying to find something to run on a MikroTik switch, since I find their L2 OS a bit lacking.

Cheers!

Edit: a kind user mentioned OpenWRT, which I should have looked into more seriously before posting this. I’m going through it right now, any suggestions are welcome!

  • @MigratingtoLemmyOP
    link
    31 year ago

    Thank you, I did consider OpenWRT (thanks for the mention, I’ll add it to the post). Since OpenWRT is mostly considered a “router-first” OS, I didn’t think it would suit a switching-only landscape: but now that you mention it, OpenWRT should be able to run very well as a switch with plenty of L3 features. And it’s linux!

    Thanks for the recommendation, I’ll go read up on it a bit

    • @Unwanted8765
      link
      51 year ago

      theres a reason you wont find many L2 “software” its extremely inefficient and kills processors. Switches use purpose built hardware to be able to hit millions of I/Os without using a lot of power because of this. If you are trying to use a generic x86 processor for this, well you will have a bad time.

      • @MigratingtoLemmyOP
        link
        31 year ago

        Hi, I’m not looking for L2 features - I’m specifically looking for software that is L3 or above. I would like to run said software on dedicated switching hardware. Unfortunately, OpenWRT does not seem to have builds for the newer Mikrotik devices.

        • terribleplan
          link
          fedilink
          English
          31 year ago

          If you want L3 features you want a router, not a switch. </pedantry>

          • @MigratingtoLemmyOP
            link
            English
            11 year ago

            I understand what you mean. Unfortunately, I need a switch to link different parts of my homelab together, and most routers on the market that I can run a custom OS on simply do not have the network backplane like dedicated switches. I was looking at Mikrotik’s offerings and whilst they have great hardware, there is no OpenWRT support for their newer models. Same with the TPLink ER series.

            If something like a Qotom box had a dedicated switching controller and ports switched through hardware instead of me having to do it via software, I’d likely purchase one of those anyway

            • terribleplan
              link
              fedilink
              English
              11 year ago

              A number of their switches do run or dualboot RouterOS not just SwitchOS. Your performance at routing might be crap and it might make the performance of the L2 stuff be limited by the crap CPU, but it is possible, haha.

          • @MigratingtoLemmyOP
            link
            11 year ago

            Sorry, but even VyOS doesn’t seem to have builds for anything other than high-end Dell. Supermicro or other similar brands. It will be difficult for me to able to run VyOS on such hardware, and I do not intend to virtualise my router either. But yes, it is a fantastic project, and I’ll keep reading about it. Thanks!