Broadcom has fully open-sourced GPL drivers for their Broadcom 5820.
Broadcom-list@xxxxxxxxxx for more details. Driver is included in the RH7.2
kernel SRPM. This does hardware acceleration for OpenSSL at the moment, I'm
not aware of the status of IPSEC support.
--
Michael
-----Original Message-----
From: jsc3@xxxxxxx [mailto:jsc3@xxxxxxx]
Sent: Monday, February 11, 2002 12:11 PM
To: lvs-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: FreeS/WAN Cluster - any experiences?
> On Mon, Feb 11, 2002 at 01:46:51PM +0100, Henrik Rossner mentioned:
> > we plan to substitute a commercial product with FreeS/WAN=20
> > (www.freeswan.org) under Linux . As we expect high traffic rates=20
> > (100MBit wirespeed, in the future even 5 times more) we thought about=20
> > building a cluster. Using LVS seems to be a good choice.
> > As the commercial product is very expensive, we can afford a number of
> > quite nice Servers (we think about Dell Power Edge 1550, 1Gig Ram).
>
> Your main bottleneck will be in the amount of data that your average CPU
> can {de,en}crypt. Something like a 2Ghz chip should be able to encrypt a
> little over a megabyte a second, with a good tail wind. You would be
> better advised to use one box, with hardware FreeS/Wan acceleration
> instead.=20
>
> There was some rumours of Intel doing drivers for the secure versions of
> the eepro100 chips (which I think some PowerEdges support), but they
> certainly never released it. Checkout the FreeS/WAN website for more
> details on what hardware is supported.=20
Broadcom was also talking about Linux support for some of their
IPsec and SSL accelerator products, but I don't know if that ever
materialized.
--
John Cronin
mailto: `echo NjsOc3@xxxxxxxxxxx | sed 's/[NOSPAM]//g'`
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