The Everything Fanless Home Server Firewall Router and NAS Appliance

69
Qotom C3758 C3758R Fanless Front Angle
Qotom C3758 C3758R Fanless Front Angle

We are going to call this one the “Everything Home Server” because, it has just about everything one can imagine. The Qotom Q20332G9-S10 may have the worst name possible, but its capabilities are amazing. We have been using this system for about two months now and have two different versions. The one we are using today has an Intel Atom C3758 processor, giving it four 10GbE SFP+ ports. There is also 2.5GbE onboard. Internal storage has room for several SSDs, but that is not the only storage interface. Instead, we get an SFF-8087 port that allows us to hook up an external 4-bay SATA JBOD chassis with a locking connector. We have been sitting on this review over the holiday season, but we wanted to bring it out in the new year.

Everything Fanless Home Server Overview

Of course, we have a video for this one.

In the video’s key lessons learned section, we show how to connect this to a QNAP TL-D400S  4-Bay SATA JBOD DAS Enclosure. That turns this system into a NAS appliance for applications like TrueNAS.

QNAP JBOD To Qotom Fanless Via SFF 8087 To SFF 8088 Cable
QNAP JBOD To Qotom Fanless Via SFF 8087 To SFF 8088 Cable

We have purchased systems from both Amazon and AliExpress (Affiliate links.) The starting price of these systems is under $286 for the barebones with the chassis. That is effectively the same price as just the motherboard on AliExpress.

Qotom C3758 C3758R Fanless Rear 1
Qotom C3758 C3758R Fanless Rear 1

We purchased our first system with a 512GB NVMe SSD and 16GB of memory for around $400 due to the high shipping costs. Something was immediately obvious when we opened the first system. These are designed to be someone’s appliance, not as the cheapest possible firewall nodes like we have seen some units come as before. We will show a bit about that in our internal overview.

Qotom C3758 C3758R Fanless Kingston
Qotom C3758 C3758R Fanless Kingston

The $400 price may be offputting to some, but just put some comparisons out there. A TrueNAS Mini X+ is a 5-bay diskless NAS that uses the same Intel Atom C3758 processor, and is around $1459 at the time of this writing for a barebones. Here is an affiliate link to the unit on Amazon. Turning this system into a 4-bay NAS is around $700-750, but it has more built-in networking than the TrueNAS Mini+.

Qotom C3758 Windows 10 Pro About
Qotom C3758 Windows 10 Pro About

Likewise, it costs about $25-30 more for the C3758R version, and that is the same CPU that underpins the Netgate 8200 Max which is the company’s $1395 18Gbps router/ firewall machine. The CPU supports Intel QuickAssist so if you have either a version of pfSense+ that supports QAT or OPNsense, you can offload crypto functions for fast IPsec VPN and so forth.

Of course, both of those systems are supported by the software vendors, and so forth. If you are just doing this as a home DIY project, this can save around $1000.

With that, let us get to the hardware.

69 COMMENTS

  1. Thanks STH for actually doing real home-lab content. This is a nice system because it’s a real CPU with real NICs and fanless. I still want to see the ms-01 review, but I’m thinking this is a better value. You’ve got the makings of a 3 host Proxmox VE cluster with this for under $1000 and 100W. If each has that DAS you’ve even got enough to do Ceph.

  2. Here is a question, If I have a Xeon-D 1540, is it worth replacing it with this? Currently running it as my firewall, but experiencing odd latency I can’t put my finger on with my knowledge of Opnsense.

  3. I’m curious to know if the C3758R version 4 lane M.2 slots? The R version has 20 PCIE 3 lanes instead of the 16 PCIE 3 lanes on the C3758.

  4. Hoping you guys can publish a review of it configured as a router or firewall. It’s no great shakes in the CPU department, nobody will buy it to compile C++ code…

  5. Some of these Aspeed chips on Board, but no Mgmt-Software on it, very curios!
    Maybe you can test some switching and routing performance of this board, would be nice.

  6. It’s got the same CPU as the Netgate 8200 Max that’ll do 18Gbps firewall iperf3 in pfSense

    Here’s the speed using the C3758R version in the Netgate 8200 Max specs:
    L3 Forwarding
    IPERF3 Traffic: 18.60 Gbps
    IMIX Traffic: 11.76 Gbps

    Firewall (10k ACLs)
    IPERF3 Traffic: 18.55 Gbps
    IMIX Traffic: 5.1 Gbps

    IPsec VPN (AES-GCM-128 w/QAT)
    IPERF3 Traffic: 3.24 Gbps
    IMIX Traffic: 810 Mbps

    That’s why you want QA.

    These aren’t new processors. They’re used in so many branded firewalls and other appliances I’m shocked there’s questions on the network perf.

  7. 7 year old Atom C3758 = FAIL

    Can that ancient 14nm chip route even one 10Gbps connection let alone **four**?

  8. @Patrick – can you confirm if the system actually supports ECC?
    although the “barebone” 18w idle is high, and 35w with 3 SSDs suggest some issues… perhaps some bad support in power saving features by the bios? …. unless of course the issue is with drives used – can you perhaps re-test this with some “known-to-be power-saving” drives?
    (I’m interested, since I’m in search of possibilities for low idle power home server)

  9. Whether the networking capabilities of an Atom-based firewall appliance are well known or not, I’d prefer that a technical review of such an appliance verify the expected performance and include the results in the report. For that matter, how fast it takes to compile a Linux kernel seems as relevant as using the firewall appliance to warm a cup of coffee. Even so, I found the review and hardware interesting. Thanks!

    Would it be possible to introduce a testing methodology for firewalls and networking?

  10. 10 Gb ports driven by Intel X553. Last I looked Linux kernel 6.xx did not support the X553. Has this changed? If not this seems to be a rather severe limitation of the unit for any of a variety of new releases. At first glance this looks like a good candidate for an inexpensive experimental Ceph network. But if the 10G ports cannot be used . . .

  11. I was also excited to use these systems as routers. Unfortunately, 4 of them failed over years, after approx 1 years of 24×7 use consistently.
    I am still in favor of fanless systems, but am staying away from Qotom specifically as unreliable.
    Unless you want to have a spare server fully configured on standby ready to replace a failed system, those are not reliable.

  12. As a former Netgate staffer I found the 8200 price and rack requirement off-putting.

    This week as I needed to purchase a 10G firewall for an event kit I considered the 8200 (despite the experiences I had at the company) and I absolutely could not justify the $1300 price tag under any circumstances and purchased this specific firewall on Monday for the kit.

    I am looking forward to getting it on my test bench in a week or two.

    Netgate needs to up their game – the 8200 price tag is way too high, but then again all their hardware prices are very high.

  13. @Curious: I don’t see a reason it could not run it. It might not be the current release, though… so you should check the VMware HCL against the known parts of this system to be sure.

  14. This would be an interesting router if it had working IPMI. I just can’t bother with a server that does not have IPMI. Not worth the time and effort to hook up a monitor, keyboard, etc. when something goes wrong and I need the console.

  15. This isn’t bad, but as others have pointed out, the lack of iKVM isn’t particularly great.

    Furthermore, that 3052 m.2 slot underneath the SSDs is a horrible idea. High-end 5G modules can easily dissipate enough heat to require a heatsink and having to install them underneath the otehr m.2 drives makes that impossible.

  16. Great box – sad the QTOMO currently does not ship to Germany. Probably some misconfiguration in their Aliexpress store.

  17. Patrick – It is good news about Proxmox (8.1.3 maybe typo?). This is using the 6.5 kernel. Ubuntu LTS is still using 6.2, which at least originally had the problem. It looks like the X553 problem must have gotten fixed in the newer kernel. I don’t know if Canonical has backported the fix since I have avoided the X553 for this reason. I appreciate your having done the test.

  18. Can you do a test where you put all 5 2.5g ports into a l2 bridge and then test this as if it was a switch?

    I’m sure it can’t do full line rate on all ports, but how much can it do?

    If I had this, I’d use it as a firewall and seriously consider just connecting 3 or 4 devices directly to it and not bothering with a separate switch. With 1 wan link, one access point, a 10g nas and 3 wired hosts there would still be one free port.

  19. The motherboard has 2 SATA ports but only one SATA SSD was connected for the article. Is there internal mounting space for a second SATA SSD?

  20. @Tim – I just got mine and, no. Just the single 2.5 screw holes but you could certainly bodge it for SSDs.

  21. @Robert, true, the lack of IPMI or iKVM is not great, but at IPMI cost 5-9W (depending on implementation), but a console port is also not bad, you can do connect it to a RPi Zero W and have remote administration.

  22. @Robert, missed the AST2400, then it is strange that they have not added the IPMI features, maybe a bios bug.

  23. ECC so dimms work, but the 10gbps thing is a MESS. I can’t reccomend these if 10gbps is your desire. I tried three different brands of twinax cables sfp+ that work fine with my ciscos, and other (brocade etc) they REFUSE to connect to ‘switches’ which include a zxytel XGS1210-12 AND an aruba 1930 24G Class4 PoE 4SFP/SFP+ 195W Switch JL683A.

    The really weird thing is if I ‘cross over’ the sfp+ cable to its two interfaces it comes up and works fine. It just won’t connect to anything else 10gbps that I have with multiple twinax sfp+ cables (including the expensive cisco ones)

    So if you want this for 10gbps its a bit of wash. Its kind of sad that the reviewers didn’t do a better job of explaining how tempermental the sfp+ ports are. I read TONS of people having problems with this (the authors claim to not have had any problems) myself included (the problems part).

    I even used the ‘same’ version of proxmox and couldn’t really ever get things working. I might try freebsd just to see if its working. Why can’t they tell us what SFP+ modules work with the 2#$$@#%#$^%#$% thing? Or even better yet which twinax cables actually work?

    Mostly its a nice PC, just don’t count on 10gbps working unless you are willing to spend tons of time on it. I was sad, since I wanted it for a nas, but its kind of useless as that. It will make a nice vm box, I just will have to live without the 10gbps until someone kindly shows me the right cable.

    So if you want the 10gbps modules to talk to themselves, the 10gps works great, otherwise IMHO 10gbps is not a reason to buy this box. I tried MULTIPLE operating systems, and multiple cables with no ability to get this working.

  24. I just installed truenas core and it seems the BSD drivers dont’ hate the thing. The linux ones are a disaster so alas all things linux are out unless you are a scholar and a gentleperson.

  25. Final update: it seems like twin Ax is a very bad way to use 10G. This thing seems to prefer Intel SFP plus cards. They’re not too expensive on eBay. I could not recommend using TwinaX when you have multi-vendor switches.

  26. Thomas Munn: FS.com sells DACs where they allow you to pick the vendor code for each end.

    On an unrelated note, my unit came with a 12V 7.5A PSU from Channel Well Technology. CWT has designed premium ATX PSUs for consumer brands like Corsair in the past, so I’d expect it to be pretty decent, not the type of generic PSUs we often see included with these mini-PCs. It’s also UL rated.

  27. Dear,

    what is de max amount of Memmory and storage for the Everything Home Server.
    Does the Everything Home Server support ProxMox or VMWare ESXi

    We need for small environments a small server solution.

    Many thanks and best regards,
    Wim Kobben, Erasmus IT Services

  28. Tried multiple 10GTek SFP+ and SFP28 DACs into a Mikrotik CRS310-8G+2S+IN, CRS326-24G-2S+RM and Zyxel XS1930-10 and no dice. I think it’s probably the Linux drivers, but if you can’t run newer Linux Kernels it’s pretty worthless IMO.

  29. Some updates on my continued travails with this box: I was running it in my server closet (which does admittedly get quite hot) and the passive cooling fails massively. The system completely froze and wouldn’t restart until I unplugged it and let it ‘cool down’. Seems OK in ambient nice 23C 70’sF but in anything approaching 95F (about 30 something C) it sadly dies. To answer the other person’s question 64GB max, with ECC. I simply cannot recommend this system based upon my own testing and attempts to make it usable in a reliable fashion. The ‘fix’ is to manually updated the drivers for proxmox (which require using DKMS and all kinds of unpleasant kernel things) and ‘hopefully’ it works. You also need to use the INTEL drivers (from intel’s out of tree distro) since some genius in the ‘in tree’ kernel COMPLETELY removed the autonegotiation function of the driver!!!!

  30. Final say on this: I got all my fancy SFP+’s only to have the unit refuse to boot (aka power on) anymore. I am sending it back to amazon. STAY AWAY.

  31. The C3758R version sold out quick! Luckily, I got my order in. This one’s going to become my new gateway! I don’t think this one will be a heavy lifter, as the atom only has E-cores, but it’ll be nice to offload some light tasks like pihole and maybe Home Assistant.

  32. I suggest enabling the s3 – power up, after power loss
    And regarding colsole
    I suggest setting it to VT100, 115200 and the same with opnsense.
    Then a simple RJ-45 cisco console cable to usb-c will work in the bios.

    regards
    Svemd

  33. @Svend Gundestrup Did you have to do anything special to get the console port working? I don’t get any output from it with a Cisco console cable using minicom, but it’s possible I’m doing something wrong. :)

  34. @Svend Same question – I’m using `minicom –device /dev/ttyUSB0 -b 115200 -t vt100` and the console is dead preboot out of the box (i only pulled out the drive and that’s it).

  35. I just picked up the C3758 (non-R) and a Noctua 5V USB powered fan to keep it cool. Picked up some large rubber band to keep it attached to the top grill.

    I’m currently planning on installing OpenSense on it. I was going to go with Pfsense, but decided at the last min to change course.

    I’m going to use all the ports on day one once I set it up. I’m also planning on getting the Minisforum MX-01 to have both of these units next to each other, connected together via the SFP+ ports.

    After reading everything here and what i’ve seen written around online, it appears going with an Intel branded SFP+ adapter makes the most sense. Any suggestions beyond that? Any other alternatives?

  36. So I’m not sure what all the handwringing about SFP+ DACs is. I’ve just loaded Proxmox 8.1.4 on my new rackmount unit and I’ve tested it in my company’s lab with a 10Gtek CAB-10SFP-P2M (my go-to cable for mixed-vendor applications). I’ve tested it plugged into our Mikrotik CRS326-24G-2S+ (first pic) and Unifi USW-PRO-48-POE (second pic), iperfing to our TrueNAS scale server (single Intel X722+same DAC, also plugged into the Pro-48). https://imgur.com/a/X90QcUX

    It’s perfectly fine. No boot hangups either with the DAC plugged in.

  37. I’m going to redact the above comment for reasons that should be obvious when you look at the iperf results ‍♂️ More testing required, will be back.

  38. Alright so I’m back. Even after trying a bunch of different options in Proxmox 8.1.4 to enable the X553s (see this thread: https://www.servethehome.com/intel-x553-networking-and-proxmox-ve-8-1-3/), nothing worked. So I nuked it and went back to 7.4X (completely stock) and wouldn’t you know it, it works like it’s supposed to now. https://imgur.com/a/xnySI4N This leaves no question in my mind about the DAC or switches being the problem – the new driver tree for 8.X’s kernel is absolutely the culprit here.

  39. Got mine today. Loaded Proxmox 8.1.4 in UEFI boot (systemd-boot) and updated to kernel 6.5.11-7pve. Can confirm the X553s will NOT link. I do get a syslog note saying: ixgbe 0000:0x:00.0 eno#: detected SFP+: #, but no link/communication.

  40. The QNAP is sold out EVERYWHERE! I called the manufacture and they said their was no lead up time on the box. dude, SO many people are getting this. any alternatives that use that SFF cable?

  41. message to everyone who wanted to buy :
    i live in china and they had some models are back in stock, receiving mine soon :)
    try to msg them on a aliexpress to get yours
    version C3758R

  42. For the folks who have purchased this: I don’t often use SFP+ slots but will for this unit, I’ll be using this as an NG Firewall(Untangle), and need the SFP+ ports for copper 10Gbe. Can anyone recommend a compatible module?

  43. I purchased this to find out there is no “Power on after Power Loss” feature. This makes it a nonstarter and I’ll be returning :-(

  44. Christopher H there is the power on after AC loss feature. It’s like S3 resume state or something like that. It is in the BIOS it is just called something obscure. Some of the AliExpress listings show how to do it if you scroll through.

  45. @AldiK

    Thank you! I found the (poorly labeled) “Power on After Power Failure” feature saving me a return. I have my instance of Untangle up and running. I ended up using another Hyper-V as Untangle still doesn’t support I266 NIC’s. I know others are using Proxmox but I don’t have time to learn a new platform and futz with its nuances to get it working right now. Hyper-V just works out of the box and won’t cause issues with updates :-)

  46. Has anyone run Sophos FW Home on this machine? I understand that the 2.5Gb ports will not work but if the BIOS is supported by Sophos, I would think the 10Gb ports will work.

  47. Guys. Good night.
    I have one of those. I installed PfSense directly.
    The pfense recognizes the DAC cable, but the speed does not exceed 1.7 gbps.
    Could you give me help with what’s going on?

  48. What others have said about 6.x Linux not supporting the X533 is completely correct. No errors in dmesg, only the link never comes up. I have had to make do with running Alpine 3.17, which has a 5.x LTS kernel, and that is working, but of course will go end of life sooner than later.

  49. Patrick, I’m curious what you think about this device:

    https://www.aliexpress.us/item/3256807251648164.html

    It has the same (or similar looking) 4×2.5GBE ports, 2xSFP cages but fully spec’d out it has an Intel Core i7-1265u, 32GB of DDR4 and a 512GB NVMe ssd.

    The only thing I see it lacking is the SFF8087 port for the JBOD but I suspect that a USB-C JBOD enclosure would suffice.

    Let me know what you think!

  50. UPDATE: I have also had success with the latest version of Proxmox. Auto-neg still does not work, but if you set it on the switch then it works just fine.
    “`shell
    # uname -a
    Linux pve-007 6.8.12-2-pve #1 SMP PREEMPT_DYNAMIC PMX 6.8.12-2 (2024-09-05T10:03Z) x86_64 GNU/Linux
    “`

    “`shell
    ethtool eno1
    Settings for eno1:
    Supported ports: [ FIBRE ]
    Supported link modes: 10000baseT/Full
    Supported pause frame use: Symmetric
    Supports auto-negotiation: No
    Supported FEC modes: Not reported
    Advertised link modes: 10000baseT/Full
    Advertised pause frame use: Symmetric
    Advertised auto-negotiation: No
    Advertised FEC modes: Not reported
    Speed: 10000Mb/s
    Duplex: Full
    Auto-negotiation: off
    Port: FIBRE
    PHYAD: 0
    Transceiver: internal
    Supports Wake-on: d
    Wake-on: d
    Current message level: 0x00000007 (7)
    drv probe link
    Link detected: yes
    “`

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