- cross-posted to:
- opnsense@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- opnsense@lemmy.world
My first blog series on headscale with traefik through podman quadlets was pretty well received on here. I’m just getting started with this blog, and thought the second topic I recently worked on might be popular in this crowd too: a lower resource method of centralizing logs for OPNSense with Grafana Loki (and Alloy) including geoIP!
Serious question:
Why opensense over openwrt?
What would I want that OpenWRT doesn’t give me? Is there any reason for me to switch?
Great question, I’ve asked myself the same thing.
First, in my opinion they serve to achieve different things. While openwrt is a firewall, it’d a simple zone based firewall and it designed primarily as router firmware, not firewall software.
Opnsense is BSD based, openwrt is Linux based. Those both haves pros and cons. BSD has serious pedigree in the networking world. Juniper switches are still based on BSD even. Openwrt gets the Linux traffic shaping goodies like cake though.
I chose openwrt because it’s more suited to my environment, where I have 10 VLANs, a 10G fiber core, and want IDS/IPS. Openwrt is meant to be lighter weight, but is less feature-full.