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## Specific Design Goals and Requirements
**A standard Linux server environment** for hosting applications, meaning that
web applications and most daemons (eg, appropriate to run on a single VPS) do
not have to be specifically re-ported to run on rooter.
**Simultaneous 200Mbps down, 109Mbps up routed ethernet throughput** between
local and remote ports. This performance ensures that rooter would not limit
the performance of [DOCSIS 3.0](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DOCSIS#Speed_tables)
cable modem connections.
**No surprises generic router functionality**, meaning that the device should
meet the expectations of non-technical users in it's default configuration:
standard firewall configuration, DHCP and DNS auto-configuration, support for
common upstream authentication mechanisms, configuration via a web interface at
the gateway's IP address.
**Hardware Hackability**, a vague concept. In this case meaning (at a minimum)
that new firmware can loaded and debugged on the device, and that low-level
electronics can be integrated using standard connections (3.3/5v GPIOs, UARTS,
SPI, ADCs, etc).
Ability to **participate in alternative networks** like wireless mesh networks
(BATMAN, OLSR, etc), darknets (i2p), or Tor without excessive difficulty. This
may require some network-specific porting and may contra-indicate some other
**"Line-rate" WiFi routed throughput** (to local or upstream ethernet ports).
For 802.11n this means 150Mbps for a single 40MHz channel.
**IPv6 fully supported out-of-the-box.**
**No reboot reliability** under defaults with "normal usage", meaning that end
users should never have to manually power cycle the device to resolve local or
uplink DHCP or routing connectivity issues.
**No NDAs, special vendor deals, or binary blobs.** A mostly free/libre
software and hardware stack, reproducable by anybody with capital and
manufacturing facilities.
**"Internet-of-Things" connectivity** via a low-power IP-based wireless
protocol (eg 802.15.4 6lowpan, ZigBee, Bluetooth Low-Energy, etc).
## Hardware features
See [design/hardware]() for specific components and costs.
- 1GHz dual-core ARM SoC processor
- 512MB+ RAM
- Internal uSD card storage, expandable through SATA and USB ports
- Modular WiFI via miniPCIe slot
- Second USB-only miniPCIe slot for expansion
- 2+ powered USB ports for expansion
- 5x Gigabit ethernet ports: 4x local + 1x upstream
- Serial and JTAG debugging via USB port
- Low-power "internet of things" gateway with 802.15.4 radio
- Hardware entropy generation device
## Comparison
<table>
<tr>
<th>Device
<th>Price (est.)
<th>CPU/RAM/Disk
<th>Ethernet Ports
<th>Router?
<th>Server?
<th>Libre?
<th>Hack?
<tr>
<td>rooter
<td>$175
<td>dual 1GHz ARM / 512MB / 8Gb uSD
<td>5x 1000Mbps
<td>Yes
<td>Yes
<td>Yes
<td>Yes
<tr>
<td>FreedomBox (DreamPlug)
<td>$180
<td>
<td>
<td>
<tr>
<td>Raspberry Pi
<td>$35
<td>
<td>
<td>
<tr>
<td>Netgear N600 Router
<td>$90
<td>
<td>
<td>
<tr>
<td>Soekris net6501
<td>$300+
<td>
<td>
<td>
<tr>
<td>Mesh Potato
<td>$100
<td>
<td>
</table>
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