Hi everyone :)

It’s time to switch and give my home network a proper minimal hardware upgrade. Right now everything is managed by my ISP’s AIO firewall/router combo. Which works okayish, but I’m already doing some firewall/dns/VPN stuff on my minimal spare laptop server to bypass most of my ISP’s restrictions. So it’s time to get a little bit “crazy” !

While I do have some “power user” knowledge regarding Linux/server/selfhosted services/networking, I’m a bit clueless hardware wise, specially regarding my ISP’s 2.5G ethernet port.

I do have a 5giga connection from my Internet provider (Obtic fiber) which is divided into 4 ethernet ports (Eth1 2.5G, Eth2 1G, Eth3 1G, Eth4 0,500G or something in that range). And right now the Eth1 port is connected through an old 1G switch.

  1. To take full advantage of my ISP’s 2.5G ethernet port do I need a router AND a switch capable of 2.5G througput ? Or only the router and the switch is going to divid it accordingly between all connected devices on a 1G switch?

I’m also looking for some recommendation/personal experience for a router and a switch with a budget of 250e.

First I was interested into a BananaPI as a router, to tinker a bit, but it seems a bit of a hassle to flash it with OpenWRT, then I found an interesting post on Lemmy talking about the Intel N100 Celeron N5105, which looks like more what I’m looking for but I’m not sure ?

  1. I have no idea what’s the best bet, a SBC (bananapi mini, orange pi, raspberry pi…) a fully fleged router (like TP-Link AX1800 and flash it with opensense/openwrt) or an Intel N100 Celeron N5105 Soft Router ?

The capabilities I’m looking for:

  • VLAN capable
  • AP VLAN capabable to segment wifi
  • Taking advantage of my ISP’s 2.5G ethernet port
  • Firewall customization capabilities

I have an eye on a managed switch I found on amazon (SODOLA 6 Port 2.5G Web Managed) but I have no idea how reliable they are, I have never heard of SODOLA.

  1. Any good recommendation I should look at for a managed switch that would work great with the same capabilities above?

  2. Probably last question, is regarding wifi APs. Is it possible to make an access point from my router even tough it hasn’t atennas? If I connect an access point directly to my router, will it be capable of giving away wifi connection?

Thanks for reading though, I’m a bit unsure how I should spend my money to have a minimal but reliable/capable homelab setup. Every advice is welcome. But keep in mind, I want to keep it minimal, a good enough routing capbability with intermediate firewall customisation. I’m already hosting a few containers with a spare laptop and the traffic isn’t going to be to crazy.

  • sabreW4K3@lazysoci.al
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    7 months ago

    I’m a newbie, so my answers may be wrong. Forgive me. Someone will correct me though 💪

    To take full advantage of my ISP’s 2.5G ethernet port do I need a router AND a switch capable of 2.5G througput ? Or only the router and the switch is going to divid it accordingly between all connected devices on a 1G switch?

    You need a switch capable of 2.5 too

    I have no idea what’s the best bet, a SBC (bananapi mini, orange pi, raspberry pi…) a fully fleged router (like TP-Link AX1800 and flash it with opensense/openwrt) or an Intel N100 Celeron N5105 Soft Router ?

    This one is 100% preference and it comes down to what you want to run. The Banana Pi RPi-R3 has good OpenWRT support. N100s have PfSense support out of the box.

    But given your requirements, you need OpenWRT/PfSense/OPNSense

    Any good recommendation I should look at for a managed switch that would work great with the same capabilities above?

    There’s some decent recent cheap ones from AliExpress, but if you can afford, grab yourself a UniFi 8 Lite POE. That said, the switch you linked seems a good purchase.

    Probably last question, is regarding wifi APs. Is it possible to make an access point from my router even tough it hasn’t atennas? If I connect an access point directly to my router, will it be capable of giving away wifi connection?

    Depends on the router, but some old routers you can stick in AP mode. Some you can flash OpenWRT and then make an access point. If it works, it’s usable.

    But again, take everything I said with a grain of salt. It just so happens I’ve been asking similar questions of late and am just telling you what stuck.