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    New to Pfsense

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General pfSense Questions
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    • bingo600B Offline
      bingo600 @TunnlRat
      last edited by bingo600

      @tunnlrat said in New to Pfsense:

      but when the LAN should grab an IP from my ISP like my normal router does its always making the WAN ip 192.168.1.92 and not getting a proper IP from the modem.

      1:
      I suppose you mean WAN , not LAN in the above line.
      It should be the WAN IF , that is conencted to the ISP.

      2:
      What ip address does the ASUS get from the ISP ?

      3:
      What does Status --> System Logs --> DHCP show ??

      fb1307a4-d537-45d3-8d44-0ade7c36d402-image.png

      Should give some info about the WAN getting the DHCP address.

      /Bingo

      If you find my answer useful - Please give the post a šŸ‘ - "thumbs up"

      pfSense+ 23.05.1 (ZFS)

      QOTOM-Q355G4 Quad Lan.
      CPUĀ  : Core i5 5250U, Ram : 8GB Kingston DDR3LV 1600
      LANĀ  : 4 x Intel 211, DiskĀ  : 240G SAMSUNG MZ7L3240HCHQ SSD

      T 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • T Offline
        TunnlRat @bingo600
        last edited by TunnlRat

        @bingo600

        1. You are correct yes I meant WAN not LAN

        2. The asus router is grabbing a proper IP from my ISP starting with 68.145.xx.xxx

        3. I read another post on the forums that suggested maybe since my modem is and always has been in bridge mode its not re issuing an IP because its locked to the MAC address of my Asus router? Should I be powering off the modem while I shift the cables around to remove the Asus router?

        Its 11:48pm here am in tired enough im gettin WAN and LAN mixed up I will try again in the morning and post what the Logs say after I attempt again in the AM

        bingo600B 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • bingo600B Offline
          bingo600 @TunnlRat
          last edited by bingo600

          @tunnlrat

          1:
          Powering down the ISP Modem , before connecting the pfSense WAN would be a good thing to do. Try that first.

          2:
          Spoofing the ASUS WAN Mac address on the pfSense WAN interface could be worth a try , if the above doesn't work
          e8cabae1-693f-4325-ab4c-e0ba8223e3a9-image.png

          But i'm not sure if it could lead to issues later on , if/when you want to connect the ASUS as an AP. Tecnically you now have that MAC twice in your setup (1= pfSense Wan , 2= Asus Wan).

          I might be seeing ghosts here. As your Asus WAN would NOT be active , so maybe it wouldn't respond to an ARP or worse proxy ARP.

          It is worth a try ...
          But i would turn off the ASUS while trying ...

          Edit:
          If you're going to sleep now, and can "live wo. internet" while sleeping , i'd disconnect & turn off the ASUS. And hope the ASUS DHCP reservation would be released , when you wake up. Now try to connect the pfSense WAN.

          /Bingo

          If you find my answer useful - Please give the post a šŸ‘ - "thumbs up"

          pfSense+ 23.05.1 (ZFS)

          QOTOM-Q355G4 Quad Lan.
          CPUĀ  : Core i5 5250U, Ram : 8GB Kingston DDR3LV 1600
          LANĀ  : 4 x Intel 211, DiskĀ  : 240G SAMSUNG MZ7L3240HCHQ SSD

          T 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
          • stephenw10S Online
            stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
            last edited by

            Yup, that^. The modem is probably locked to the MAC address of the old router and needs to be reset or have the MAC spoofed to match.

            Steve

            JonathanLeeJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • JonathanLeeJ Offline
              JonathanLee @stephenw10
              last edited by JonathanLee

              @stephenw10 I think pfSense can preform ppp and other modem functionality for wan connections like DSL and others thus deleting the need for a DTE (data terminating equipment) /modem's functions once it is in bridge mode. DTE/DCE built-in functionality can be enabled if configured correctly, however bridge mode I think disabled the DHCP on the modem.

              https://docs.netgate.com/pfsense/en/latest/interfaces/ppp.html

              Make sure to upvote

              JonathanLeeJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • JonathanLeeJ Offline
                JonathanLee @JonathanLee
                last edited by

                @jonathanlee

                "PPPoE is a popular method of authenticating and gaining access to an ISP network, most commonly found on DSL networks, but may also be used on fiber or other link types."

                This can be done inside pfSense for DSL.

                What is the WAN connection using?

                Make sure to upvote

                JonathanLeeJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • T Offline
                  TunnlRat @bingo600
                  last edited by

                  @bingo600 @stephenw10 I got it! Finally!

                  I've got so many network connections in my house I didn't wanna take the internet down until everyone else was in bed or at work but I finally got it. The modem is an XB7. I'm on shaw internet in Canada the Fibre 1.5gbs. I shut everything off including the modem did the wire changes I needed did a factory reset on the PfSense machine just to make sure everything was clean and fresh.

                  Turned on the modem after giving it 5 minutes of downtime and the PfSense machine grabbed the proper IP address no problem.

                  My next step it outside of what I need with PfSense now I believe, I am going to turn my Asus router into just a wifi AP with 2 machines wired into it just because of how everything worked out.

                  This is great thank you so much for all the help with the USB NIC and the advice on getting the Modem to reset I really appreciate it!

                  bingo600B 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • bingo600B Offline
                    bingo600 @TunnlRat
                    last edited by bingo600

                    @tunnlrat
                    That is great news šŸ‘
                    And since you didn't have to "Spoof the ASUS MAC" , you should have no issue connecting it (ASUS), and use it as an AP.

                    For a simple non-vlan WiFi setup , you should connect the ASUS LAN (not wan) to the pfSense Lan , where you want the WiFi to be connected.
                    I recommend you to disable the ASUS DHCP Server , and let pfSense control all DHCP.

                    /Bingo

                    If you find my answer useful - Please give the post a šŸ‘ - "thumbs up"

                    pfSense+ 23.05.1 (ZFS)

                    QOTOM-Q355G4 Quad Lan.
                    CPUĀ  : Core i5 5250U, Ram : 8GB Kingston DDR3LV 1600
                    LANĀ  : 4 x Intel 211, DiskĀ  : 240G SAMSUNG MZ7L3240HCHQ SSD

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • stephenw10S Online
                      stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                      last edited by

                      Nice!

                      See: https://docs.netgate.com/pfsense/en/latest/recipes/external-wireless-router.html#turning-a-wireless-router-into-an-access-point

                      Bonus points for putting OpenWRT on the Asus for true AP mode. šŸ˜‰ (if it supports it)

                      Steve

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • JonathanLeeJ Offline
                        JonathanLee @JonathanLee
                        last edited by

                        @jonathanlee

                        https://getlabsdone.com/how-to-setup-pfsense-pppoe-wan/

                        Great example of bridging the modem

                        Make sure to upvote

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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