I think one of the drawbacks to the raspi is that the ethernet port is provided by a USB Ethernet adapter -- the ethernet port is actually on the usb hub. Actually not really a drawback as long as you're not a. attempting to access a usb device over the network or b. trying to get performance over~80mbps. There are various reports around the internet that suggest that w/ certain OpenVPN configurations the tp-link might be capable of 20-30mbps  and that the raspi might be capable of 30-50...

With the raspi I believe you've only got one 100mpbs ethernet port, so you'd probably want to buy a usb ethernet adapter.

This is actually a question that we've been grappling with for a while. With the rise of this broad array of embedded devices, we're really curious about affordable mini-computers that could be attached to the mesh for a variety of purposes. It would be terrific to connect a raspberry pi-like device to the mesh and serve an own-cloud instance, or an etherpad, or provide VPN services, or some sort of bulletin board, or provide a locally cached version of wikipedia, or .....?. We've pre-ordered a couple of the new tessel 2.0 boards (because we happen to enjoy javascript and because they're a local company so we've gotta root for them). For more performance routing and the like, the PCEngines are probably the next best option (and we might consider them in locations where we'd like to actually do encrypted tunneling for peoplesopen.net connections). I have access to a couple soekris net650 routers, but the price point on those makes it pretty out of our league for most purposes I think.

As always, we love to have as much up to date documentation as possible. I'm not so much a fan of video myself (harder to plain text search), but I'd be happy to help facilitate the setup and documentation of your project.

Max

On Wed, Jun 17, 2015 at 1:28 PM, Adrian Chadd <adrian@freebsd.org> wrote:
On 17 June 2015 at 16:23, max b <maxb.personal@gmail.com> wrote:
> What would you say is "performance"? I would've imagined they're probably
> capable of something on the order of 20mbps, but that's basically a guess
> out of thin air?

I don't have one running to test with. It depends on what people are
after. Heck, I bet the rpi would be better at VPN crypto than the
atheros MIPS stuff.

(Hi hep!)


-adrian