Sure . you can do all of that without a lot of trouble.  Everyone on here
will have some sort of recommendation, but you can easily do it with just
about any old box . just make sure the power supply is good with a decent
hard drive and they are good to go.

 

I basically have 

 

 + Centos 4 or 5 on a cheap refurbished HP box

 + use Firestarter software for the firewall because it has a gui and I got
tired of writing commands for IPTables

 + there are easy settings in firestarter (and I am sure there are many more
good firewall products out there) to set the basics . allow all outgoing,
deny incoming, etc.

 + adding samba is a possibility, but I do not do that as I store on
something else behind the firewall

 + I have DSL and feed directly from their system into my NIC for the
outside world

 + I use a second NIC and a gigabit router for anything inside to connect up
through 

 

Cheap, safe, simple, reliable.

 

Randy

 

From: tclug-list-bounces at mn-linux.org
[mailto:tclug-list-bounces at mn-linux.org] On Behalf Of Olwe Bottorff
Sent: Thursday, July 01, 2010 4:14 PM
To: TCLUG Mailing List
Subject: [tclug-list] Advice on using Linux box as router/firewall/file
manager?

 


I've got friends (really) -- who want to use an old box as a
router/firewall/file server at the business. I told them Linux can do this
-- all-in-one. But I've never been a serious admin type. Am I right that one
box with Linux can do these things?

 

They have a modem from their ISP patched into a Netgear Web Safe Router
(RP614v3) and four Win boxes (2XP, Vista, Win7) plugged into the router.
Could this router be deactivated and used as just a hub? Would file serving
be done by Samba?

 

O

GM,MN

 

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mailman.mn-linux.org/pipermail/tclug-list/attachments/20100701/d3ff74d1/attachment.htm