Hi there. Long time SNB reader, a bit of a lurker on the forums, first time I actually need hands-on help not answered elsewhere.
I'll try to make this as short and to the point as possible, since I usually tend to digress a bit. So, there we go:
1) Cause: HORRIBLE all-in-one wireless DSL router/gateway on the network (Thomson TG784), with a lot of bling (it even has PSTN pass-through, DECT and a VOIP server) but a hedious GUI (ISP-locked to boot), lousy packet handling (you can either download or upload at decent speeds, not both, and high loads make it spontaneously reboot, while not always being able to sync again) and only "G" Wireless speeds. Plus firewall rules are laughable, and seldom "stick" during a reboot.
2) Objective: Upgrade the router and consolidate network applications (shutting down one always-on power guzzler serving files), while getting to satisfy my inner IT geek by handling both hardware and software
.
3) Available hardware: custom-made 18x18x18cm cube box containing an Intel D945GCLF Atom board, 2GB of RAM, 320GB HDD, PSU and a Realtek PCI Gigabit card; plus standard pen drive (1GB and 4GB available), Belkin F7D2101 Wireless N dongle (Realtek chipset) and a D-Link DSL-320T Ethernet DSL modem (with bridged mode support).
4) Specific requirements: Network firewall and routing, unrestricted WLAN-to-LAN and LAN-to-WLAN access, ED2K and BT handling by the router (limited SMB access will be needed, too), QoS on traffic based on protocol and/or application. I do not need AV screening and other such CPU intensive tasks, this is low-end machine, after all...
5) Wish list: 2 or 3-line VOIP, possibly to handle Faxing duties too (my ISP offers me a VOIP number, and I do have a POTS line, though I'd need an adapter for that, and there's not quite enough money to spare on that one), LAN-to-LAN VPN connection (I'm talking ~1Mbps speeds tops, so not too much hassle there) and transparent proxy.
So, long story short, I'm a long-time Windows user, somewhat fluent in "IPese", and I've actually setup a W2K3+cFosSpeed router with similar hardware (Pentium D 805 at the time, and I seldom had to turn the oil heater on during the winter... lol), but without wireless AP capabilities (not available for XP-based kernels at the time, plus I had repeater requirements for the wireless network, and back then the only sure way to make it work was by using two products from the same vendor).
I've somewhat managed to do the same with W2K8R2 without wireless (RRAS hasn't changed too much, after all, and I still remember how to set up the PPPoE link to the DSL modem on the WAN port), but as soon as I add the wireless dongle to the mix (using Windows built-in AP mode for compatible wireless dongles, which my dongle supports, and Connectify), chaos ensues, with the only machine on the network getting Internet access being the router itself
So, as you see, I need a bit of help. I don't know if I'm messing up big time on the routing tables (not messing with the standard ones Windows creates, btw) or if I'm missing something bigger. Do you have any pointers on this one? Routing table entries, steps I might have not taken?
Also, while I'm not very "fluent" in Linux, I've been around since DOS, and I'm not afraid to use the command line (just need to know the syntax of the commands and what each part of it is used for) or learn new stuff. If you guys think something like Copfilter or similar might be easier (I'd need to use an ad-hoc network, I believe, since Master Mode is only available for non-USB chipsets, and even then only mostly from Atheros, plus I have yet to see a router distro that handles wireless natively), I'd be game for it, as long as I'm able to add the stuff I want not readily available (plus it might even run from USB, and let the HDD for only caching and file serving needs, which is always nice... hehe)
OK, I think that covers it. Any help will be greatly appreciated.
Cheers.
Miguel
I'll try to make this as short and to the point as possible, since I usually tend to digress a bit. So, there we go:
1) Cause: HORRIBLE all-in-one wireless DSL router/gateway on the network (Thomson TG784), with a lot of bling (it even has PSTN pass-through, DECT and a VOIP server) but a hedious GUI (ISP-locked to boot), lousy packet handling (you can either download or upload at decent speeds, not both, and high loads make it spontaneously reboot, while not always being able to sync again) and only "G" Wireless speeds. Plus firewall rules are laughable, and seldom "stick" during a reboot.
2) Objective: Upgrade the router and consolidate network applications (shutting down one always-on power guzzler serving files), while getting to satisfy my inner IT geek by handling both hardware and software

3) Available hardware: custom-made 18x18x18cm cube box containing an Intel D945GCLF Atom board, 2GB of RAM, 320GB HDD, PSU and a Realtek PCI Gigabit card; plus standard pen drive (1GB and 4GB available), Belkin F7D2101 Wireless N dongle (Realtek chipset) and a D-Link DSL-320T Ethernet DSL modem (with bridged mode support).
4) Specific requirements: Network firewall and routing, unrestricted WLAN-to-LAN and LAN-to-WLAN access, ED2K and BT handling by the router (limited SMB access will be needed, too), QoS on traffic based on protocol and/or application. I do not need AV screening and other such CPU intensive tasks, this is low-end machine, after all...
5) Wish list: 2 or 3-line VOIP, possibly to handle Faxing duties too (my ISP offers me a VOIP number, and I do have a POTS line, though I'd need an adapter for that, and there's not quite enough money to spare on that one), LAN-to-LAN VPN connection (I'm talking ~1Mbps speeds tops, so not too much hassle there) and transparent proxy.
So, long story short, I'm a long-time Windows user, somewhat fluent in "IPese", and I've actually setup a W2K3+cFosSpeed router with similar hardware (Pentium D 805 at the time, and I seldom had to turn the oil heater on during the winter... lol), but without wireless AP capabilities (not available for XP-based kernels at the time, plus I had repeater requirements for the wireless network, and back then the only sure way to make it work was by using two products from the same vendor).
I've somewhat managed to do the same with W2K8R2 without wireless (RRAS hasn't changed too much, after all, and I still remember how to set up the PPPoE link to the DSL modem on the WAN port), but as soon as I add the wireless dongle to the mix (using Windows built-in AP mode for compatible wireless dongles, which my dongle supports, and Connectify), chaos ensues, with the only machine on the network getting Internet access being the router itself

So, as you see, I need a bit of help. I don't know if I'm messing up big time on the routing tables (not messing with the standard ones Windows creates, btw) or if I'm missing something bigger. Do you have any pointers on this one? Routing table entries, steps I might have not taken?
Also, while I'm not very "fluent" in Linux, I've been around since DOS, and I'm not afraid to use the command line (just need to know the syntax of the commands and what each part of it is used for) or learn new stuff. If you guys think something like Copfilter or similar might be easier (I'd need to use an ad-hoc network, I believe, since Master Mode is only available for non-USB chipsets, and even then only mostly from Atheros, plus I have yet to see a router distro that handles wireless natively), I'd be game for it, as long as I'm able to add the stuff I want not readily available (plus it might even run from USB, and let the HDD for only caching and file serving needs, which is always nice... hehe)
OK, I think that covers it. Any help will be greatly appreciated.
Cheers.
Miguel