To close the loop on this. I saw in the Netgate hardware discussions where an M.2 2242 SSD with B+M keys can work in the 2100. https://forum.netgate.com/topic/184700/m-2-sata-ssd-128gb?_=1722035654829
@stephenw10 Thank you. I see your point regarding the ticket, I reviewed the information requested, it is the way to go, so thank you, if t this file will not work I will follow through.
I assume if you just install and boot from an SSD it does boot OK?
Does that system claim to support NVMe drives? I don't see it in the specs.
You should, technically, be able to boot a bootloader from SSD and then boot from NVMe if it can see that. That combination is not something I've tried though.
Yeah I would open a ticket about that. It should recognise the 7100 and setup the switch and VLANs etc so you can connect out on the default interfaces.
If that's not happening then it isn't recognising the hardware for some reason. That might mean the data passed by the bios is incorrect.
Also important to note is that coming from a pfSense version that old probably means it has an old Coreboot version and that will need to be updated. That must be done in an older pfSense version, 23.05.1 or earlier.
Steve
@stephenw10 said in upgrade from 2.7.0 to 2.7.2 failed:
Run pkg-static -d update, see what error is shown.
The most common issue coming from 2.7.0 though is a cert issue. If it shows that try running certctl rehash and retesting.
I just had this error on a server that wouldn't update and "certctl rehash" fixed it.
Thank you for taking the time to post fixes, as it helps people years later!
@fireix I understand when I was still in the field I was one time in a data center for over 18 hours straight working on this huge Cisco equipment that has a special service contact. We had to keep swapping drives and devices back and forth to get configuration and data off for the new drives it was a nightmare call and the parts were no longer made so they sent new stuff that required new cards to work. I felt like a zombie after I left. But it was accessible and running had iOS running and when I started it was completely dead and no parts could be ordered for it in the system, Our team had our hands full with it but we got it going. By the time I left all the needed was an activation code adapted and added to it for all the features it was using again.
Right. The FreeBSD base changed from 12 to 14 between pfSense 2.6 and 2.7. Older versions of both ESXi and the VM version within it do not support FreeBSD 14 so be sure both are new enough.