Article 626SS This 6-inch board turns a Raspberry Pi module into a DIY router

This 6-inch board turns a Raspberry Pi module into a DIY router

by
Kevin Purdy
from Ars Technica - All content on (#626SS)
cm4_router-800x600.jpg

Enlarge / Let your Pi do the work while the CM4 Router Board handles the connections. (credit: Seeed Studio)

If you're intrigued by the prospect of building a DIY router, Seeed Studio has a board that's just waiting to put a Raspberry Pi Computing Module 4 (CM4) to work. Assuming, of course, that you can find the Pi module.

Seeed's CM4 Router Board adds two full-speed gigabit network ports, two USB 2.0 ports, a microSD slot, an HDMI out, a GPIO interface for Raspberry Pi HAT add-ons, and a 0.91-inch OLED display to your Pi CM4. Having the CM4 at the system's core gives you 32 different options for RAM, storage, and wireless capabilities on your homebrew router. The Router Board comes with OpenWRT installed, but it could run Ubuntu, Raspberry OS, or any other Pi-friendly system.

Seeed notes that beyond DIY routers, the CM4 Router Board could also become a gateway, mini-NAS, wireless network bridge, or mini-server. You can buy a Pi CM4 with wireless capabilities, but you'll likely need (or prefer) a separate Wi-Fi setup connected to your DIY router.

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