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    New Fiber install, fresh Pfsense install, only getting 20Mbps up/down

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General pfSense Questions
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    • stephenw10S
      stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
      last edited by

      I wouldn't expect anything the converter is doing to affect the connection. As long as it's linked correctly on both sides. But clearly something is happening.

      You might try running a packet capture just to see if there is anything obvious being sent.

      Steve

      J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • J
        jddoxtator @stephenw10
        last edited by

        @stephenw10

        Ok, I found something. Turns out the ISP router is getting a different remote gateway then the Pfsense router. I'm going to try directing it to that gateway and see what happens.

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        • J
          jddoxtator
          last edited by

          Interesting....

          the ISP router is getting a gateway IP of 192.24.57.1 and the Pfsense box is getting a gateway IP of 172.31.16.1

          If I try to point it towards the Gateway of the ISP router, Pfsense tells me that The gateway address 192.24.57.1 does not lie within one of the chosen interface's subnets.

          keyserK JKnottJ 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • J
            jddoxtator
            last edited by jddoxtator

            Damn no dice.

            I found the setting to use out of range IP's in advanced, but even setting it to default gateway it still uses 172.31.17.1

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            • J
              jddoxtator
              last edited by

              Noticed another discrepancy. ISP router does not connect IPv6. So I turned it off in Pfsense. No effect, still 20Mbps.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • J
                jddoxtator
                last edited by jddoxtator

                Really at a loss of what to do now.

                Here is the entire connectivity screen from the ISP router. Maybe one of you can see something I am not.

                INTERNET

                Internet Status
                Internet Status reflects the status of the ISP connection.

                Connection Status
                IPv4 Connection Connected
                IPv6 Connection Disconnected

                Internet Settings
                The table below displays the current state of the Internet connection and settings.

                Internet Setting Status
                IPv4 WAN Protocol dhcp
                IPv6 WAN Protocol dhcpv6
                MTU Size 1500
                MSS Size 1460
                TCP Connection 109
                RWIN Size 163840
                Packets Sent 4568070
                Packets Received 11488214

                IPv4 Addressing
                The table below displays currently assigned Internet connectivity settings for the device.

                Parameter Status
                Device IPv4 Address 192.24.57.117
                Device IPv4 Subnet Mask 255.255.255.0
                DNS Address #1 8.8.8.8
                DNS Address #2 64.235.98.226
                Remote Gateway Address 192.24.57.1
                Link Uptime 0D 0H 0M 44S

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                • keyserK
                  keyser Rebel Alliance @jddoxtator
                  last edited by

                  @jddoxtator said in New Fiber install, fresh Pfsense install, only getting 20Mbps up/down:

                  Interesting....

                  the ISP router is getting a gateway IP of 192.24.57.1 and the Pfsense box is getting a gateway IP of 172.31.16.1

                  If I try to point it towards the Gateway of the ISP router, Pfsense tells me that The gateway address 192.24.57.1 does not lie within one of the chosen interface's subnets.

                  Your ISP router is likely using a certain tagged VLAN on its interface since it lands in a different subnet and gets a different Gateway.
                  Your pfsense by default uses the untagged native VLAN of the interface.

                  Try using the ISP router, quickly switch to the pfSense and do a packet capture in promiscous mode (diagnostics -> packet capture).
                  See if you capture any frames with a VLAN tag that indicates what VLAN you should be usinng

                  Love the no fuss of using the official appliances :-)

                  J P 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • J
                    jddoxtator @keyser
                    last edited by stephenw10

                    @keyser

                    Ok, I captured packets from WAN with nothing attached to make sure there was no activity, then started a new capture and unplugged the WAN from the ISP router and directly plugged it into the WAN on the Pfsense router

                    This is what I got after 30 seconds of capture:

                    02:28:01.732611 DTPv1, length 38
                    02:28:02.699840 ARP, Request who-has 192.24.57.1 tell 192.24.57.117, length 28
                    02:28:02.731372 DTPv1, length 38
                    02:28:03.429465 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                    02:28:03.733838 DTPv1, length 38
                    02:28:04.264595 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                    02:28:04.796229 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                    02:28:05.302364 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                    02:28:05.773757 IP6 fe80::3eec:efff:fe70:1cf5.546 > ff02::1:2.547: UDP, length 36
                    02:28:06.372418 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                    02:28:06.683297 IP6 fe80::3eec:efff:fe70:1cf5.546 > ff02::1:2.547: UDP, length 36
                    02:28:06.816486 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                    02:28:08.433281 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                    02:28:08.473367 IP6 fe80::3eec:efff:fe70:1cf5.546 > ff02::1:2.547: UDP, length 36
                    02:28:08.822134 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                    02:28:10.838025 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                    02:28:11.155034 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                    02:28:11.194577 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                    02:28:12.003469 IP6 fe80::3eec:efff:fe70:1cf5.546 > ff02::1:2.547: UDP, length 36
                    02:28:12.854932 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                    02:28:14.882978 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                    02:28:16.901047 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                    02:28:18.975871 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                    02:28:19.022785 IP6 fe80::3eec:efff:fe70:1cf5.546 > ff02::1:2.547: UDP, length 36
                    02:28:20.998571 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                    02:28:22.254055 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                    02:28:23.002261 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                    02:28:24.361084 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                    02:28:25.030319 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                    02:28:27.049727 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                    

                    It looks like a bunch of spam of IP 0.0.0.68 complaining about topology change. What is interesting is the bridge ID. Is that Pfsense or the ISP gateway?

                    keyserK 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • P
                      Patch @keyser
                      last edited by

                      @keyser said in New Fiber install, fresh Pfsense install, only getting 20Mbps up/down:

                      Try using the ISP router, quickly switch to the pfSense and do a packet capture in promiscous mode (diagnostics -> packet capture).
                      See if you capture any frames with a VLAN tag that indicates what VLAN you should be usinng

                      Does that work?
                      I assumed you would need to put a managed switch in the WAN line, configure port mirror, then do a packet capture on that.

                      keyserK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • keyserK
                        keyser Rebel Alliance @Patch
                        last edited by

                        @patch said in New Fiber install, fresh Pfsense install, only getting 20Mbps up/down:

                        @keyser said in New Fiber install, fresh Pfsense install, only getting 20Mbps up/down:

                        Try using the ISP router, quickly switch to the pfSense and do a packet capture in promiscous mode (diagnostics -> packet capture).
                        See if you capture any frames with a VLAN tag that indicates what VLAN you should be usinng

                        Does that work?
                        I assumed you would need to put a managed switch in the WAN line, configure port mirror, then do a packet capture on that.

                        Depends: If your ISP is routing at the edge (ie: where your fiber is linked), then no, because the switching of boxes causes a link down which takes the routing/VLAN interface down in their equipment. But here in DK, the edge equipment is quite often only a stupid L2 bridge device, and then the quick switch usually sees a bunch of TCP retries and what not from existing sessions being transmitted down your line where you can see the VLAN tag.

                        So it was just an attempted quick fix.

                        Love the no fuss of using the official appliances :-)

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                        • keyserK
                          keyser Rebel Alliance @jddoxtator
                          last edited by

                          @jddoxtator said in New Fiber install, fresh Pfsense install, only getting 20Mbps up/down:

                          @keyser

                          Ok, I captured packets from WAN with nothing attached to make sure there was no activity, then started a new capture and unplugged the WAN from the ISP router and directly plugged it into the WAN on the Pfsense router

                          This is what I got after 30 seconds of capture:

                          02:28:01.732611 DTPv1, length 38
                          02:28:02.699840 ARP, Request who-has 192.24.57.1 tell 192.24.57.117, length 28
                          02:28:02.731372 DTPv1, length 38
                          02:28:03.429465 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                          02:28:03.733838 DTPv1, length 38
                          02:28:04.264595 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                          02:28:04.796229 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                          02:28:05.302364 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                          02:28:05.773757 IP6 fe80::3eec:efff:fe70:1cf5.546 > ff02::1:2.547: UDP, length 36
                          02:28:06.372418 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                          02:28:06.683297 IP6 fe80::3eec:efff:fe70:1cf5.546 > ff02::1:2.547: UDP, length 36
                          02:28:06.816486 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                          02:28:08.433281 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                          02:28:08.473367 IP6 fe80::3eec:efff:fe70:1cf5.546 > ff02::1:2.547: UDP, length 36
                          02:28:08.822134 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                          02:28:10.838025 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                          02:28:11.155034 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                          02:28:11.194577 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                          02:28:12.003469 IP6 fe80::3eec:efff:fe70:1cf5.546 > ff02::1:2.547: UDP, length 36
                          02:28:12.854932 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                          02:28:14.882978 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                          02:28:16.901047 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                          02:28:18.975871 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                          02:28:19.022785 IP6 fe80::3eec:efff:fe70:1cf5.546 > ff02::1:2.547: UDP, length 36
                          02:28:20.998571 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                          02:28:22.254055 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                          02:28:23.002261 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                          02:28:24.361084 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                          02:28:25.030319 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                          02:28:27.049727 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42

                          It looks like a bunch of spam of IP 0.0.0.68 complaining about topology change. What is interesting is the bridge ID. Is that Pfsense or the ISP gateway?

                          Well we can’t decode everything from this as that is only a summary “overview” of the capture. You need to open it in Wireshark or another pcap decoder application.

                          However, a few things is obvious. Your ISP is not your average setup since they run Spanning Tree to the client edge - that’s a new for me - never seen that before :-)
                          But there is also Cisco dynamic trunking protocol frames on the wire, so it seems your ISP is running some VLANs on the wire.

                          The funny thing though… all the 0.0.0.0:68 frames is your pfSense trying to aqquire a IP address via DHCP - it doesn’t get any. So there is no Internet available to it - how on earth are you testing with success albeit very slow speed?

                          Love the no fuss of using the official appliances :-)

                          keyserK J 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • keyserK
                            keyser Rebel Alliance @keyser
                            last edited by

                            @keyser Also, the very first ARP frame (the second frame in the capture) is very interesting. I fail to understand how that frame was generated since your pfSense does not have an IP address at this time - and certainly not the public IP address your ISP box had when it was connected.

                            We want your pfSense to aqquire that IP - or another public IP in the same range - via DHCP, but that has not happened at that time in the capture.
                            It also seems to be an inbound frame instead of outbound…. So it’s just strange. But it might have our needed VLAN tag attached, so inspect that frame in Wireshark.

                            Love the no fuss of using the official appliances :-)

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                            • keyserK
                              keyser Rebel Alliance @jddoxtator
                              last edited by

                              @jddoxtator said in New Fiber install, fresh Pfsense install, only getting 20Mbps up/down:

                              @patch The ISP configures it with DHCP, MAC address and an IP alias. The gateway is picked up automatically.

                              Converter is UMC-GA1F1T some FS-unlimited brand. The router is just a bog standard consumer router.

                              Just looked that converter up, and it is a L2 Ethernet media converter. You should be able to simply move the SFP fiber module to a SFP port in your pfSense (if it has any).
                              As I read your posts, you have already tried that unsuccessfully because your NIC does not recognise the SFP.

                              But even if you get a compatible SFP for your pfSense NIC, you still need to figure out which VLAN tag to use on your WAN interface in pfSense.

                              Love the no fuss of using the official appliances :-)

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • keyserK
                                keyser Rebel Alliance @jddoxtator
                                last edited by keyser

                                @jddoxtator Ahhh, think I just figured your strange packet capture. You had the ISP router connected to a switch, and the switch to the media converter right?
                                You then disconnected the ISP router from the switch the same time you connected your pfSense right?

                                Then the first ARP frame is a broadcast from your ISP router because you had them both connected for a brief split second. And all the Spanning tree frames are from your switch…. :-)

                                AND: if that’s the case then the ARP frame should have your needed VLAN tag attached. So download and install Wireshark on your machine. Download the packet capture from your pfSense and open it in Wireshark. Inspect the ARP frame, and look at the Ethernet VLAN tag on that frame.

                                You then need to create that VLAN number on your pfSense, and reassign your WAN interface to that VLAN number on the NIC connected to the switch/media converter.

                                Love the no fuss of using the official appliances :-)

                                J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • JKnottJ
                                  JKnott @jddoxtator
                                  last edited by

                                  @jddoxtator

                                  The ISP's router has to be within the address range you get. You can't just change the router address and expect it to work.

                                  PfSense running on Qotom mini PC
                                  i5 CPU, 4 GB memory, 32 GB SSD & 4 Intel Gb Ethernet ports.
                                  UniFi AC-Lite access point

                                  I haven't lost my mind. It's around here...somewhere...

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                                  • J
                                    jddoxtator @keyser
                                    last edited by jddoxtator

                                    @keyser
                                    Ah, This is very helpful.

                                    I am assuming that the ARP IP address is related to the fact that I have set the gateway manually to the same one as the ISP router and forced static IP for the gateway.

                                    There was no switch between the converter and the ISP router before the WAN port was switched over to the WAN port on the pfsense device.

                                    I will download this Wireshark you speak of and see the details.

                                    Edit: Slight problem... I run Linux on all my devices, is there a wireshark for linux?
                                    Edit2: nvm found it.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • J
                                      jddoxtator
                                      last edited by jddoxtator

                                      My mistake, the ARP request came from some Calix device.

                                      Here is the expanded log:

                                      1 0.000000 Cisco_89:a0:f6 CDP/VTP/DTP/PAgP/UDLD DTP 60 Dynamic Trunk Protocol
                                      2 0.967229 Calix_6b:e8:f7 Broadcast ARP 42 Who has 192.24.57.1? Tell 192.24.57.117
                                      3 0.998761 Cisco_89:a0:f6 CDP/VTP/DTP/PAgP/UDLD DTP 60 Dynamic Trunk Protocol
                                      4 1.696854 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.255 DHCP 342 DHCP Request - Transaction ID 0xa4d00549
                                      5 2.001227 Cisco_89:a0:f6 CDP/VTP/DTP/PAgP/UDLD DTP 60 Dynamic Trunk Protocol
                                      6 2.531984 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.255 DHCP 342 DHCP Request - Transaction ID 0xa4d00549
                                      7 3.063618 Cisco_89:a0:f6 PVST+ STP 64 Conf. TC + Root = 24576/85/7c:69:f6:f2:da:40 Cost = 2 Port = 0x814f
                                      8 3.569753 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.255 DHCP 342 DHCP Discover - Transaction ID 0x1c1ffc0e
                                      9 4.041146 fe80::3eec:efff:fe70:1cf5 ff02::1:2 DHCPv6 98 Information-request XID: 0x0163ec CID: 0001000129f61dd33cecef701cf5
                                      10 4.639807 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.255 DHCP 342 DHCP Request - Transaction ID 0xa4d00549
                                      11 4.950686 fe80::3eec:efff:fe70:1cf5 ff02::1:2 DHCPv6 98 Information-request XID: 0x0163ec CID: 0001000129f61dd33cecef701cf5
                                      12 5.083875 Cisco_89:a0:f6 PVST+ STP 64 Conf. TC + Root = 24576/85/7c:69:f6:f2:da:40 Cost = 2 Port = 0x814f
                                      13 6.700670 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.255 DHCP 342 DHCP Discover - Transaction ID 0x1c1ffc0e
                                      14 6.740756 fe80::3eec:efff:fe70:1cf5 ff02::1:2 DHCPv6 98 Information-request XID: 0x0163ec CID: 0001000129f61dd33cecef701cf5
                                      15 7.089523 Cisco_89:a0:f6 PVST+ STP 64 Conf. TC + Root = 24576/85/7c:69:f6:f2:da:40 Cost = 2 Port = 0x814f
                                      16 9.105414 Cisco_89:a0:f6 PVST+ STP 64 Conf. TC + Root = 24576/85/7c:69:f6:f2:da:40 Cost = 2 Port = 0x814f
                                      17 9.422423 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.255 DHCP 342 DHCP Request - Transaction ID 0xa4d00549
                                      18 9.461966 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.255 DHCP 342 DHCP Discover - Transaction ID 0x1c1ffc0e
                                      19 10.270858 fe80::3eec:efff:fe70:1cf5 ff02::1:2 DHCPv6 98 Information-request XID: 0x0163ec CID: 0001000129f61dd33cecef701cf5
                                      20 11.122321 Cisco_89:a0:f6 PVST+ STP 64 Conf. TC + Root = 24576/85/7c:69:f6:f2:da:40 Cost = 2 Port = 0x814f
                                      21 13.150367 Cisco_89:a0:f6 PVST+ STP 64 Conf. TC + Root = 24576/85/7c:69:f6:f2:da:40 Cost = 2 Port = 0x814f
                                      22 15.168436 Cisco_89:a0:f6 PVST+ STP 64 Conf. TC + Root = 24576/85/7c:69:f6:f2:da:40 Cost = 2 Port = 0x814f
                                      23 17.243260 Cisco_89:a0:f6 PVST+ STP 64 Conf. TC + Root = 24576/85/7c:69:f6:f2:da:40 Cost = 2 Port = 0x814f
                                      24 17.290174 fe80::3eec:efff:fe70:1cf5 ff02::1:2 DHCPv6 98 Information-request XID: 0x0163ec CID: 0001000129f61dd33cecef701cf5
                                      25 19.265960 Cisco_89:a0:f6 PVST+ STP 64 Conf. TC + Root = 24576/85/7c:69:f6:f2:da:40 Cost = 2 Port = 0x814f
                                      26 20.521444 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.255 DHCP 342 DHCP Discover - Transaction ID 0xa45704e7
                                      27 21.269650 Cisco_89:a0:f6 PVST+ STP 64 Conf. TC + Root = 24576/85/7c:69:f6:f2:da:40 Cost = 2 Port = 0x814f
                                      28 22.628473 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.255 DHCP 342 DHCP Discover - Transaction ID 0xa45704e7
                                      29 23.297708 Cisco_89:a0:f6 PVST+ STP 64 Conf. TC + Root = 24576/85/7c:69:f6:f2:da:40 Cost = 2 Port = 0x814f
                                      30 25.317116 Cisco_89:a0:f6 PVST+ STP 64 Conf. TC + Root = 24576/85/7c:69:f6:f2:da:40 Cost = 2 Port = 0x814f

                                      Not a network engineer, so not exactly sure what I am looking at, but I don't see anything that specifically references VLAN. Unless PVST+ is some kind of VLAN like protocol.

                                      Editr: Search is your friend. It appears that PVST+ is a cisco brand Per VLAN Spanning Tree Plus. Though I don't see anything but a MAC address and ports, no IP to configure a VLAN from.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • J
                                        jddoxtator @keyser
                                        last edited by

                                        @keyser said in New Fiber install, fresh Pfsense install, only getting 20Mbps up/down:

                                        @jddoxtator said in New Fiber install, fresh Pfsense install, only getting 20Mbps up/down:

                                        @keyser

                                        Ok, I captured packets from WAN with nothing attached to make sure there was no activity, then started a new capture and unplugged the WAN from the ISP router and directly plugged it into the WAN on the Pfsense router

                                        This is what I got after 30 seconds of capture:

                                        02:28:01.732611 DTPv1, length 38
                                        02:28:02.699840 ARP, Request who-has 192.24.57.1 tell 192.24.57.117, length 28
                                        02:28:02.731372 DTPv1, length 38
                                        02:28:03.429465 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                                        02:28:03.733838 DTPv1, length 38
                                        02:28:04.264595 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                                        02:28:04.796229 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                                        02:28:05.302364 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                                        02:28:05.773757 IP6 fe80::3eec:efff:fe70:1cf5.546 > ff02::1:2.547: UDP, length 36
                                        02:28:06.372418 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                                        02:28:06.683297 IP6 fe80::3eec:efff:fe70:1cf5.546 > ff02::1:2.547: UDP, length 36
                                        02:28:06.816486 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                                        02:28:08.433281 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                                        02:28:08.473367 IP6 fe80::3eec:efff:fe70:1cf5.546 > ff02::1:2.547: UDP, length 36
                                        02:28:08.822134 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                                        02:28:10.838025 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                                        02:28:11.155034 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                                        02:28:11.194577 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                                        02:28:12.003469 IP6 fe80::3eec:efff:fe70:1cf5.546 > ff02::1:2.547: UDP, length 36
                                        02:28:12.854932 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                                        02:28:14.882978 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                                        02:28:16.901047 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                                        02:28:18.975871 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                                        02:28:19.022785 IP6 fe80::3eec:efff:fe70:1cf5.546 > ff02::1:2.547: UDP, length 36
                                        02:28:20.998571 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                                        02:28:22.254055 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                                        02:28:23.002261 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                                        02:28:24.361084 IP 0.0.0.0.68 > 255.255.255.255.67: UDP, length 300
                                        02:28:25.030319 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42
                                        02:28:27.049727 STP 802.1d, Config, Flags [Topology change], bridge-id 8055.e0:2f:6d:a5:16:80.814f, length 42

                                        It looks like a bunch of spam of IP 0.0.0.68 complaining about topology change. What is interesting is the bridge ID. Is that Pfsense or the ISP gateway?

                                        Well we can’t decode everything from this as that is only a summary “overview” of the capture. You need to open it in Wireshark or another pcap decoder application.

                                        However, a few things is obvious. Your ISP is not your average setup since they run Spanning Tree to the client edge - that’s a new for me - never seen that before :-)
                                        But there is also Cisco dynamic trunking protocol frames on the wire, so it seems your ISP is running some VLANs on the wire.

                                        The funny thing though… all the 0.0.0.0:68 frames is your pfSense trying to aqquire a IP address via DHCP - it doesn’t get any. So there is no Internet available to it - how on earth are you testing with success albeit very slow speed?

                                        Forgot to address the connection with no IP. It does get one, but it seems it is the wrong gateway. They are currently still building out the network in my area, so there may be some insecure patch devices in the line for workers to access? That's my only thought...

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                                        • stephenw10S
                                          stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                          last edited by

                                          Mmm, this does seem like either a VLAN is required or maybe priority tagging. Or possibly some DHCP client options.
                                          A pcap of the ISP router connecting would show it either way.

                                          Steve

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                                          • J
                                            jddoxtator
                                            last edited by jddoxtator

                                            So if I am correct in my understanding.... It sounds like I just need to make a VLAN based around the IP address in that ARP request.

                                            I have two IP's

                                            Sender IP address: 192.24.57.117

                                            Target IP address: 192.24.57.1

                                            Target has to be the gatway VLAN and I have to apply this to WAN device?

                                            Oh, and the Calix device is the ISP router, so this was a captured broadcast from the ISP router. I'm guessing I caught the echo off the gateway because it wasn't plugged into any switch. It was a really fast port swap and I had the recorder going when I did it.

                                            Did some more research, and the VLAN tag should be 57 based on the IP addresses I think.

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