Maryfi Is a Free Software Router for Windows 7

Windows: Remember Microsoft Virtual Wi-Fi plans for Windows 7? Although the project is officially dead, but the source code is available, and without the application Maryfi takes advantage of this to offer a software router that can share a single Wi-Fi portion, such as those used in airports, hotels, etc

Edit-we received news that Maryfi used many of the copyrighted logos and text Connectify, a similar service that we’ve covered in the past. Readers are advised to exercise caution when using the software from sources that the reuse of copyrighted material and encourage you to look also at Connectify.
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Chuck Norris karate chops routers botnet hard

Many large IT operations using open source technology – operating systems, applications, development tools and databases. Why not in the router as well?

It’s a matter of Sam Noble, Chief of the system, the network thought the judicial Division, Supreme Court of New Mexico, while linking the search for a way to the state courts of a new centralized case management.

Noble wanted an affordable and flexible DSL router, but found that the ISP modems do not control the ability to remotely access the state of the local link, an important condition for the courts.

Alternatively, you can add maps to the series 2600-Frame Relay, ADSL, routers supplied by Cisco Systems, Inc., used in some courthouses, the most important functions, but the old equipment lacked the strength to support the performance of the firewall.

A third option, Juniper Networks NetScreen Firewall SSG20 Inc. / DSL router with the “missing many features we wanted, without limit as the command line with all the functions and interfaces of the tunnel,” said Noble.

A frustrated Noble decided to investigate is another option: Open-source router. The technology is developing, but not a favorite among managers.

Noble distributed first download an open source software from the router and with the support of Belmont, California, Vyatta Inc. on a laptop and ran a few preliminary tests. “I was particularly interested in whether the management interfaces are complete and feature-rich,” he said.

Impressed by the initial results Noble has a prototype site in Santa Fe to the performance of technology, economy and the ability to work with other technologies, the Court established the study of work. “We had a DSL to test and find the best settings without affecting our production network to make,” he said.

Noble believes that tests provide open-source router can do what he wanted. He also noted that the VPN concentrator, support for Border Gateway Protocol and URL filtering, and security packet capture “is not available or too costly to add to Cisco or NetScreen-Team”.

In April 2008, Noble began implementing Vyatta router device with an average of both sides of every month. After completion of the project in the next year the router – 514 in total – will be held from 40 to 50 locations around the state in case of centralized management system.

Possible problems

Analysts and users should be aware that managers should explore the use of open-source router is aware of its potential for support issues and compatibility that may occur with any open-source product. “Care must be taken during the deployment,” said Mark Fabbi, an analyst at Gartner Inc. “Not ready for world domination, but, but certainly an interesting basis for discussion.”

Trey Johnson, a member of staff at the University of Florida in Gainesville, said the selection of a technology company with a limited history of providing enterprise-level problems for IT administrators. “It’s a tough sell to get into a business model with him,” said Johnson.

The University uses to support an open-source Vyatta router. “[The router] was actually a company behind it – you can buy the support of IT, making it profitable,” said Johnson.

Others say that leave the community support, a trademark of Open Source are two guys in a business environment have. Communities often do not react as fast as IT managers want and not to give inexperienced users one-on-one instruction.

Noble and Johnson are two of a small but growing number of managers to avoid the property of router for open source alternatives for a variety of reasons.

Noble, for example, said that without pain, adaptation, the greatest benefit of technology. “The flexibility built with a stack of free software in our routers will allow us to make a small change – a pinch -. or supplement, and with minimal impact on long-term plans for others”

Hassler, says Barry, president of Hassler Communication Systems Technology Inc., which designs and ISP’s network in Dayton, Ohio, he iproute a Linux distribution based on open source routing uses the Linux Foundation for large users in your organization by providing Internet access enterprise-class at an affordable price. “I am using a standard PC, Linux, with integrated routing capabilities,” he said. “What we do with these boxes from multiple interfaces, which are fairly standard routing routing, but other than to do We manage also able to increase the bandwidth. ”

Hassler believes that a comparable Cisco router would be more than twice the Linux-based router you choose iproute costs. “It helps [General] low cost,” he said.

Enterprise Solutions IT-Consulting Center CMIT Rhode Island was installed firmware DD-WRT open source on two Linksys wireless router for additional features, said Adam Tucker, a network engineer in the company. “We wanted a robust system to manage our wireless QoS for voice over IP [and] things like that, and add some of the most advanced filters and things firmware [old] just not taken into charge, able to prioritize, “said.

Tucker said that the router works perfectly for over a year.

Fabbi said he sees great potential for open-source router, especially in the service industry and retail food, where large companies often have thousands of links to websites without breaking the budget. “You think of a McDonald’s or Burger King [where] there are thousands of places like the franchise, but still want to make a link,” he said.

In other industries, open source technology and is designed for server-based applications for routing, such as virtualization adapted Fabbi said. He stressed that the router virtualization applications are limited only by the imagination of developers. “Sometimes it’s as simple as a distributed print servers;. Sometimes it is caching video distribution ”

Ready for business?

Matthias Machowinski, an analyst at Infonetics Research in Campbell, Calif., said he believes the open-source router for now able to manage the workload at the company. “If you have reasonable requirements – a desktop-size or a normal amount of traffic – so in terms of performance, must be able to handle the traffic load,” he said. The only exceptions are listed the major companies operating an extraordinary amount of traffic, how distributors of video content.

Open-source routers are also start their own peculiarities in the front, said Machowinski. “They started not as feature rich as part of trade flows [products], but the open-source router manufacturers have reduced this gap,” he said.

Open-source router in three basic forms: software that turns a standard PC or server on a combination router and firewall, can be used in the firmware of an existing router, and applications that are preinstalled with Free Software Source Routing come. Vyatta also DD-WRT and iproute, open-source technologies such as XORP routing Xorp.org downloadable pfSense, a free, open-source operating system FreeBSD distribution for use as a firewall and router to be adjusted.

Probably, despite a steadily increasing profile and not a growing number of followers, the open-source router to overturn the status quo of the market in the short term. This is because in the field of open source still microscopic compared to the market share of the top sellers of real estate, including giant Cisco, about 80% of the total market. But Cisco has recently begun to make representations to the world of open source.

Edwards is a writer technology in the Phoenix area.

Brocade launches management tools and 100GbE router

Brocade, Brocade Advisor Network, a platform for managing converged networks, storage and IP networks, and high density of 100Gb Ethernet router, as part of their overall strategy of the data center running.

The products presented on Wednesday, are part of a strategy for networking specialists, Brocade, which aims to simplify the architecture of the modern data center. It competes with large packets of hardware companies such as the central Cisco Unified Computing Systems and Juniper Networks provided the project status.

“Brocade using Network Advisor (BNA) to reduce operational costs by minimizing customer training, increased automation and consolidation tools” Jason Nolet, Vice President Data Center of the company and the group networking business, said in a statement.

What is a router?

Is a router still a router even if forwarding packets is just one of its many jobs?

View slideshow on the Evolution of Routing

More and more applications, such as firewalls, VPN concentration, voice gateways and video monitoring, are being piled onto routers. Cisco’s Integrated Services Router (ISR), for example, even boasts an optional application server blade for running scores of Linux and open source packages.

“A customer came to us inquiring about all the services on a router but they did not need the routing capabilities,” says Inbar Lasser-Raab, senior director of network systems at Cisco. “It’s becoming a hosting platform for any service linked or tied into the routing capability.”

About a fifth of Cisco‘s annual $35 billion to $40 billion in revenue is attributable to sales of enterprise and service provider routers. And the worldwide router market in 2008 was just less than $13 billion, according to Dell’Oro Group.

But those numbers might become harder to track as the definition of a router changes.

“Whether you call a particular platform or chassis a router depends on what the thing is primarily used for,” says Jeff Doyle, president of consultancy Jeff Doyle and Associates and a Network World blogger. “Media gateways, firewalls, GGSNs, etc. They might all have router functions in them, but they are generally called by whatever their primary role in the network is.”

In many respects routing has become a more general purpose utility on a hardware platform not exclusively optimized for routing. The routing aspect becomes back-of-mind as the capabilities of the device’s other applications and services are of more immediate need.

“As the hardware has evolved…it’s similar to the hardware that’s used for servers,” says Eric Wolford, senior vice president, marketing and business development at Riverbed, which makes WAN optimizers. “The software becomes a bigger and more important part of deciding what it is. Routing is the software logic that does the connecting of the dots. Routing can be done on a variety of hardware platforms.”

Vyatta, for example, runs Linux-based routing code on x86 hardware. It also runs several other open source network applications on the standard hardware, including firewall, VPN concentration, virtualization, address management, traffic management and intrusion prevention that scales from the branch office to the service provider edge.

“In the old days, vendors developed a new box around a new function; we’re now seeing a move to bring all of these functions together,” says Dave Roberts, vice president of strategy and marketing at Vyatta. “It doesn’t make sense every place in the network to plop down three different boxes, or four or five and daisy chain them altogether. It makes sense to still have all these functions but as pieces of a larger system that plays in different places in the network — more of a general purpose device that supports a lot of functionality.”

Vyatta customer New Mexico Courts says the more features that are added to a router, the more the software component of routing is distinguished from the hardware. Time was when router hardware – specialized ASICs and packet processors – was intrinsic to the function itself.

“I gave up on what my traditional concept of a router was some time ago,” says Sam Noble, senior network systems administrator for New Mexico Courts. “It’s an obvious location to add additional services. But it does change the focus of the device. What it highlights is how much of a router is software, not as much a hardware platform as we tend to traditionally think of it.”

Some, however, still feel that if that general purpose device routes, it should be called a router despite the number of additional tasks it performs that push routing to the background. As long as it is forwarding packets based on Layer 3 source and destination information – despite whatever else it does – it’s still a router, says Cisco Certified Design Expert Mike Morris, a communications engineering manager at a $3 billion high-tech company and a Network World blogger.

“It’s still a router, but the definition of ‘router’ is changing,” Morris says. “We think of routers at Layer 3 moving packets in and out of interfaces after altering the data slightly. A lot of the extra features added to routers these days do the very same thing, but at different layers: [session border controllers] operate at Layer 5, application acceleration is Layer 4 and Layer 7, firewall can be at many layers. But all still deal with moving data in one interface and moving it out another after altering the data in some fashion.”

Juniper agrees. It recently enhanced its service provider routers to enable network operators to perform application-layer, real-time MPEG video stream quality monitoring to improve performance and scale.

This capability or any other layered on top of the company’s M- or MX-series platforms, does not make them any less of a router though, according to Juniper.

“Maybe the capabilities of a router have evolved and enhanced over time but I still consider the core functions, the heart of a router, to be unchanged,” says Rami Rahim, vice president of product management for Juniper’s Edge and Aggregation business unit. “As long as the introduction of these advanced services like MPEG-level video monitoring don’t compromise our ability to also scale the router in its more traditional Layer 3 routing function, then I think it’s still a router. It’s just a router that’s vastly enhanced with advanced services. Our customers buy routers; whether they add functionality or not doesn’t make it any less of a router.”

The key, Rahim says, is the “architectural integrity” of the platform that the routing and advanced services functionality runs on. To Juniper, this means separating the packet processing of a router cleanly and distinctly into forwarding, control and services planes.

Without this separation, “innovation” on one plane — such as MPEG video monitoring on the services or control plane — could compromise performance of another plane, like forwarding, he says.

Still, anything that manipulates packets beyond Layer 3 should be called something else – like a gateway, according to Paul Congdon, CTO at HP ProCurve.

“A router is Layer 3, a switch/bridge is Layer 2, and a gateway anything above that,” Congdon says. “Gateway is probably the more accurate term these days, when you look at all the levels of forwarding that takes place.”

HP ProCurve recently unveiled a server blade for its 8200 and 5400 switches that enables users to begin integrating and consolidating switching and application processing. The ProCurve ONE module runs software applications from Microsoft (security and network access), McAfee (Web security, filtering and intrusion-prevention system), Avaya (unified communications), F5 Networks (application delivery control and load balancing), Riverbed (WAN optimization), and others.

The ProCurve ONE module is intended to open the switch forwarding plane to more network-centric application awareness, Congdon says. HP has no plans to rename its switches gateways, however.

Carrier Qwest is responding to the federal Networx RFP for “service enabling devices” with routers. It’s not a term Qwest disagrees with, and the routers they’re providing are not much more sophisticated than the DSL modem in Product Management Vice President Eric Bozich’s home.

“The DSL modem probably has the same kind of routing intelligence that devices you pay thousands of dollars for have,” Bozich says. “So things have progressed significantly in terms of what’s the right terminology. I think service enabling devices is more accurate because it’s really what these things do.”

Bozich says “there’s no magic anymore” to routing — the functionality of being a traffic cop and moving packets from one interface to another and making those kinds of decisions at wire speed. But it’s still essential if not sexy anymore – a DSL modem with 100 features on it still has to route.

“On a DSL modem, I can create ACLs, it’s got wireless connectivity, got firewall capabilities… the device goes way beyond packets in/packet out,” Bozich says. “But if it didn’t do the packets in/packets out, it wouldn’t be a very useful modem.”

So where is all of this heading? Cisco’s Lasser-Raab believes the trend of hosting more and more applications on a router will change the complexion of the device – but not the name.

“We already have the ISR name; but it’s an integrated services platform,” she says. “A router is still the device that sits between the WAN and the business network, the LAN. I do associate that with routing more than anything.”

Routers rebound now; optical, wireless later

The router market worldwide will grow by 6% over the next five years, while optical transport and mobility infrastructure will not be significant growth until the year 2005, according to Dell’Oro Group.

In a series of five-year forecasts, Dell’Oro said the router market will grow from $ 6.3 billion in 2003 to 8.6 billion U.S. dollars in 2008. The second half of 2003 was the “turning point” for the market, which had experienced declining sales for several years, Dell’Oro states.

telecommunications service providers and enterprises are planning to increase investment in their router networks this year, Dell’Oro expects this trend to continue over the next five years.

The market for optical transport equipment will be flat this year, after years of decline, and return to sales growth in 2005, says Dell’Oro. Sale of optical transport equipment will reach 7.3 billion U.S. dollars by the year 2008, the company provides, from $ 6.1 billion in 2003.

Metro applications will lead to recovery as service providers focus on offering differentiated services, says Dell’Oro. In 2004, the company estimates that 65% of sales of optical transport equipment will be deployed in an application of a meter, compared with 30% three years ago at the peak of the optical market.

Meanwhile, the market for total mobility infrastructure – GSM / GPRS / EDGE, TDMA, CDMA and WCDMA – reduced by 1% in 2004 to 25.7 billion U.S. dollars, and then begin to recover in 2005 with 5% growth, says Dell’Oro. Growth is forecast to accelerate to 13% in 2006 due to new deployments in China, and CDMA 1X EV-DO and DV upgrades.

In 2006, revenues infrastructure and WCDMA base station shipments down surpass those of GSM-based systems.

The total market, driven mainly by WCDMA, will increase by 7% in 2007 and 2008, reaching 34.8 billion U.S. dollars in 2008, the company says.

Trends fueling the recovery include improved global macroeconomic environment, improving the service economy, such as stabilized average revenue per user per month, and low capital expenditure income ratio and the proliferation of subscriber terminals color screens and cameras, which will stimulate the development of applications.