Quoting Jason : > Bob George wrote: > > > > "George Toft" wrote: > > > [...] > > > Since you may not recall my previous statements, let me recap: I > pointed > > > out that laptops were not well suited as routers because of the > heat > > > buildup from running the hard drive continuously. This was based on > my > > > experience replacing the hard drive in my laptop two times. > > > > I've considered doing a laptop/notebook firewall/gateway using a > > floppy-based or CD-ROM based distribution. The form-factor is perfect, > and > > not having a hard drive should really keep it cool. That's a > consideration, > > especially during the hot months. I don't mind burning out a drive, > but > > having my office run 10 degrees warmer than the rest of the house is a > bit > > of a drag. > > If its simply a need to use a router, why not create a system with a > large amount of ram, and miminal software (i.e. full router suite > only). Then keep everything in RAMdisk. > > The paranoid will point out the need for firewall logs on HD, but, > really: if an attacker can erase the RAMdisk, the attacker can also > erase the HD. The only thing logs on HD will genuinely show advantage > in is a power failure or power supply failure... both of which are > entirely more likely on a system with an HD anyways (a ramdisk-based > system that spins down its HD after bootup will last far longer on UPS > power than one with an active HD. Also, same HD puts more strain (and > hence, heat) on power supplies) > > Or do it "right" and log to one of those cartridges that plugs into > the IDE "slot" (formerly cable connector) on most motherboards... > > -- Wouldn't it be easier to log to the syslog on a different computer on the LAN? Craig ------------------------------------------------- This mail sent through IMP: barney.azapple.com