Is is a good idea to use Windows Server as a router?


Recommended Posts

A copy of Windows is going to cost more than a router. I would get a router, but if you're going to use the PC, you might as well put Linux or FreeBSD on it. Windows is a waste of money.

Agreed. Not to mention the power costs alone will waste extra $$$

I was going to say the power cost would end up way more than the router over a few years.

MAYBE if you use your Windows Server PC all the time, than you could possibly do it. But if you are ONLY using it as a router, I strongly suggest no.

why would you want to use a windows server as router for a home network? Or a linux server for that matter

- it consumes more power

- is generally less stable

- costs more

Unless you have a very good reason it would be a waste of time and money

Thanks for the input!

cost is not an issue since i already have that computer running as a file server and for some other uses. I do have access to msdnaa for windows server.

So the quetion is simple, who will perform better? If a dedicted router will perform better then I guess I'll spend the extra cost to get one. Otherwise why not use the PC as a router?

Thanks for the input!

cost is not an issue since i already have that computer running as a file server and for some other uses. I do have access to msdnaa for windows server.

So the quetion is simple, who will perform better? If a dedicted router will perform better then I guess I'll spend the extra cost to get one. Otherwise why not use the PC as a router?

I'm guessing this is your home network? There's no real difference. If you already have the machine up and running you have nothing to lose by giving it a try.

'I've heard too many stories on bad routers that always crash/drop connections etc etc under heavy use"

This can be true for some home routers.. But using windows is going to give you less features and more complexity. Unless your running say ISA or something your going to be very limited in what you can do, or at min its going to be more complicated to setup.

If you want to leverage pc hardware to use as your router -- then go the linux router distro gateway way, pfsense, ipcop, smoothwall, m0n0wall, etc. Or if you want to use it as a file server, domain controller, email, etc. etc. Then go with a distro like ClarkConnect or SME Server which are distros designed to be a gateway for your network while also providing file sharing features, content filtering, caching, etc.

I have run all the above listed distros at one time or another, and currently use pfsense -- I would personally never go back to the limitations of a soho router. When I can leverage a junk p3 800 for example as a screaming router with all the bells and whistles.

'I've heard too many stories on bad routers that always crash/drop connections etc etc under heavy use"

This can be true for some home routers.. But using windows is going to give you less features and more complexity. Unless your running say ISA or something your going to be very limited in what you can do, or at min its going to be more complicated to setup.

If you want to leverage pc hardware to use as your router -- then go the linux router distro gateway way, pfsense, ipcop, smoothwall, m0n0wall, etc. Or if you want to use it as a file server, domain controller, email, etc. etc. Then go with a distro like ClarkConnect or SME Server which are distros designed to be a gateway for your network while also providing file sharing features, content filtering, caching, etc.

I have run all the above listed distros at one time or another, and currently use pfsense -- I would personally never go back to the limitations of a soho router. When I can leverage a junk p3 800 for example as a screaming router with all the bells and whistles.

Hey thanks, looks like I can give SME Server a try!

yes it's a home network with 3 clients. It's just that I've heard too many stories on bad routers that always crash/drop connections etc etc under heavy use, so i thought a PC might be a good alternative.

Well, that is true to some extent, but the kind of heavy use in question can really only be generated in one way on a home network, and that is with Bittorrent. These routers normally do address translation in addition to just routing (so you can have multiple clients with just one public IP address), which is somewhat more demanding. It's possible to configure a torrent client in such a way that it will attempt to open hundreds or even thousands of connections a second and maintain thousands of open connections. This can overwhelm a router, and is really outside of the kind of use they were designed for. In fact, if you tried hard enough you could even encounter hard limits such as the port number being a 16-bit variable, which results in a total limit of about 64,500 connections (which don't necessarily have to be open, they can have different states) for the whole network (assuming the address translation implementation can handle that load). This isn't much of a real problem, since it can be resolved by just changing the settings.

"Hey thanks, looks like I can give SME Server a try! "

I would suggest you try CC before SME.. CC community version is FREE, some people don't look at the site enough and think that CC costs money -- only for the enterprise version that comes with support.

"Hey thanks, looks like I can give SME Server a try! "

I would suggest you try CC before SME.. CC community version is FREE, some people don't look at the site enough and think that CC costs money -- only for the enterprise version that comes with support.

haha you got that right, I saw the word buy and 30 day trail and left the site.. anyway thanks again.

Windows Server with Routing and Remote Access works way better than home routers and and is comparible to a enterprise router from Dell but you still would need to buy a switch to allow more than one pc on the network.

also with the Linux suggestions I have to say that there are tons of great distros to try

The plus to using a server is you dont have to power cycle the damn thing like 99% of the home routers I have used after a year of heavy use

I am currently using a PowerEdge 1430 Server with Server 2008 for routing hooked into PowerConnect 5424 switch and a D-Link WBR-1310 for wifi access

Edited by winrez
why would you want to use a windows server as router for a home network? Or a linux server for that matter

- it consumes more power

- is generally less stable

- costs more

Unless you have a very good reason it would be a waste of time and money

You do know that most "home" routers are running some sort of linux on them? so your stability comment is kinda incorrect .

If you don't care about price and want the ultimate in configuration and features, give Windows Server a try... I think you'd get more use out of it once you try some of it's more advanced features, and file sharing and remote access, terminal server, active directory, and such are much more functional and useful to have around.

If you want wireless pick up a nice Cisco access point - run dedicated channels for each type of WiFi and w/ and w/o encryption if you want for best performance. ^_^

The plus to using a server is you dont have to power cycle the damn thing like 99% of the home routers I have used after a year of heavy use

Is this a joke? A yearly reboot? Do you run Windows for years without installing any updates?

I am currently using a PowerEdge 1430 Server with Server 2008 for routing hooked into PowerConnect 5424 switch and a D-Link WBR-1310 for wifi access

Please tell me this is doing more than just routing on a home network. Talk about overkill.

Virtually all home users would be better of with a dedicated cheapo router. Running a full-blown server OS just adds unneeded complexity without offering anything of value.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • This one baffles me...so they are creating a museum based around the Ship of Theseus? A museum is supposed to preserve things. It doesn't really work if the conversation goes, "I gazed upon Starry Night the other day, the colours were beautiful!" "Yeah...I didn't expect Godzilla to show up, though." Create a building devoted to displaying AI work, fine. The rainforest idea sounds interesting and I would consider visiting if they pay me a few bucks. But don't call it a museum...
    • >defenders of AI-generated artworks often claim that AI is just a tool It is not. It is the inhuman artist replacement. The human writing the prompt is the employer/manager requesting the work product of the artist -- a supervisory/descriptive job that doesn't carry with it any rights to the copyright of that work product at all. And since AI is not human itself, it can't gain copyright for anything it is asked to regurgitate or hallucinate, so it can't transfer that copyright to the employer/manager/human who asked for the output. This was all legally reaffirmed last year. So, no, while there are AI tools, AI slopware generation is NOT a "tool" in the legal definition of that word.
    • As long as i get to play GTA 6 before it ends 😂😂
    • Google is opening the world's first AI museum in Los Angeles by Ivan Jenic Image via: Google Ever since AI image generators went mainstream, the debate over whether AI-generated art is real art hasn't let up. Those who don’t consider AI to be art say that if a machine does the creating and anyone can prompt it, there’s no skill involved, and therefore no art is produced. The counter-argument is equally persistent, as defenders of AI-generated artworks often claim that AI is just a tool, and that every major technological breakthrough, like the camera or the computer, was met with the same skepticism before eventually being accepted as a legitimate creative medium. Google’s position in this debate is clear. Which is no surprise, as the company is investing billions in AI infrastructure. And now, in efforts to encourage people to use its AI even more, Google is opening Dataland on June 20, which it's calling the world's first AI arts museum. Located inside The Grand LA, a Frank Gehry-designed building in Los Angeles, the museum spans 25,000 square feet. The museum is built around a collaboration with media artist Refik Anadol, who has worked with Google since 2016. The inaugural exhibition is called Machine Dreams: Rainforest, and is powered by an AI model trained on “an extensive dataset of the natural world.” It generates 1.2 billion pixels of visuals in real time and reacts to visitors dynamically. The space also generates soundscapes, real-time emotion sensing, and algorithmically produced scents. Image via: Refik Anadol Studio / Google Google says that the museum is powered by its Gemini models, which run on Google Cloud. So, everything is generated inside one of Google’s AI data centers and is streamed to the museum. Alongside the museum opening, Google Arts & Culture is funding an AI Artist Residency, giving four artists $25,000 grants each, along with mentorship from Refik Anadol Studio and access to Google's machine learning tools. Their work will be shown at Dataland and on the Google Arts & Culture website later this year. Google’s AI museum will undoubtedly initiate a fired-up debate on social media, and we can’t wait to see the first reactions. Via: Smithsonian Magazine
    • Calling GTA 6 overhyped crap doesn’t make you edgy, it just makes you sound like someone who hasn’t enjoyed anything since the PS2 era.
  • Recent Achievements

    • First Post
      AndreaB earned a badge
      First Post
    • Week One Done
      Huge Trailer earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      Classifyskilleducation earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      eurospharma62 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      With What earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      570
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      178
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      74
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      68
    5. 5
      neufuse
      64
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!