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x86 Commodity-Hardware Router?

neomage86 asks: "I recently had to set up a router for a small company, only five users at any given time, and the needed VPN capabilities are built in. So, instead of using a Cisco or other embedded router, I decided to just install Linux and IPTables on an old 200 MHz PII I had lying around. It's been working fine, and I'm thinking about doing something like this for a much larger network (3000+ users). Does anyone have suggestions on how much I will have to beef up the hardware to provide IP Masquerading for about 1000 users on a T3; provide network-layer filtering of the transmission; and route between 4-5 internal subnets?"

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  1. Go BSD rather then Linux..... by jsimon12 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I would personally go with a BSD flavor rather then Linux. Don't get me wrong Linux is great but BSD was designed with routing in mind. You will be able to get away with less hardware and out of box things like OpenBSD are going to be more secure then a commodity Linux.