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    Netgate 4100 disk

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Official Netgate® Hardware
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    • F
      Felix 4 @stephenw10
      last edited by

      @stephenw10

      Hi Steve, thanks for your reply.

      You must bear in mind that I am, as I said, new to the subject and do not know how to see that info. I haven't found a place that shows it.
      ;o)

      GertjanG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • GertjanG
        Gertjan @Felix 4
        last edited by

        @felix-4 said in Netgate 4100 disk:

        I haven't found a place that shows it.

        @stephenw10 was using the most important access to you pfSense ; the console or SSH.
        He showed you the partition on his drive. Just add the several mediasize together.

        Btw : when you buy a 100 Gbytes disk, and install Windows on it, you wind up having a disk "C:" with about 80 Gbytes. The rest is sued for 'other stuff'. You will find more then one partion, one of them is the C: drive, and other portions for windows internal use.

        No "help me" PM's please. Use the forum, the community will thank you.
        Edit : and where are the logs ??

        F 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • F
          Felix 4 @Gertjan
          last edited by

          @gertjan

          Thanks for reply.

          Exactly as you describe, I know well that there is a difference between a new drive, before and after installation, of for example Windows.
          I just have no experience with Netgate 4100, i.e. whether the original hard drive size is displayed, or a partition after installing Pfsense, which is what I am describing. (11G)

          So if someone answers that there is usually 11 G available on such a device, then I know that it is normal.

          I've started working with ssh, but from the 16 possible choices, I don't get insight into the partitions, so it probably requires a special command.

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

            Choose option 8 at the console menu to access the command line. (Enter 'exit' to get back to the menu).

            At the command line run the command I showed there: geom part list
            You should see very similar output to what I posted.

            But, yes, what you;re seeing is the expected value and not any indication of a problem. ☺

            Steve

            F GertjanG 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • F
              Felix 4 @stephenw10
              last edited by

              @stephenw10 said in Netgate 4100 disk:

              geom part list

              Thank you Steve,

              You have enriched my day, I am happy for the help I got here. Getting to know my new 4100 is an exciting world.

              ;o)

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • N
                Neha gi
                last edited by

                This post is deleted!
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                • GertjanG
                  Gertjan @stephenw10
                  last edited by

                  @stephenw10 said in Netgate 4100 disk:

                  At the command line run the command I showed there: geom part list
                  You should see very similar output to what I posted.

                  [22.05-RELEASE][admin@pfSense.right-here.net]/root: geom part list
                  Geom name: nvd0
                  modified: false
                  state: OK
                  fwheads: 255
                  fwsectors: 63
                  last: 234441639
                  first: 3
                  entries: 4
                  scheme: GPT
                  Providers:
                  1. Name: nvd0p1
                     Mediasize: 209715200 (200M)
                     Sectorsize: 512
                     Stripesize: 0
                     Stripeoffset: 1536
                     Mode: r0w0e0
                     efimedia: HD(1,GPT,53119e25-8838-11ec-8def-539c1f4371c1,0x3,0x64000)
                     rawuuid: 53119e25-8838-11ec-8def-539c1f4371c1
                     rawtype: c12a7328-f81f-11d2-ba4b-00a0c93ec93b
                     label: (null)
                     length: 209715200
                     offset: 1536
                     type: efi
                     index: 1
                     end: 409602
                     start: 3
                  2. Name: nvd0p2
                     Mediasize: 113922309632 (106G)
                     Sectorsize: 512
                     Stripesize: 0
                     Stripeoffset: 209716736
                     Mode: r1w1e1
                     efimedia: HD(2,GPT,53119e2b-8838-11ec-8def-539c1f4371c1,0x64003,0xd43263f)
                     rawuuid: 53119e2b-8838-11ec-8def-539c1f4371c1
                     rawtype: 516e7cb6-6ecf-11d6-8ff8-00022d09712b
                     label: (null)
                     length: 113922309632
                     offset: 209716736
                     type: freebsd-ufs
                     index: 2
                     end: 222914113
                     start: 409603
                  3. Name: nvd0p3
                     Mediasize: 5902090752 (5.5G)
                     Sectorsize: 512
                     Stripesize: 0
                     Stripeoffset: 2462876672
                     Mode: r0w0e0
                     efimedia: HD(3,GPT,6a2f135c-af59-11ec-b93b-90ec7729392c,0xd496642,0xafe561)
                     rawuuid: 6a2f135c-af59-11ec-b93b-90ec7729392c
                     rawtype: 516e7cb5-6ecf-11d6-8ff8-00022d09712b
                     label: (null)
                     length: 5902090752
                     offset: 114132026368
                     type: freebsd-swap
                     index: 3
                     end: 234441634
                     start: 222914114
                  Consumers:
                  1. Name: nvd0
                     Mediasize: 120034123776 (112G)
                     Sectorsize: 512
                     Mode: r1w1e2
                  

                  What I make of it :
                  There is a device (and driver) called : nvd0 - 112G
                  Partition 1 : nvd0p1 - something like a boot partition - 200 Mb
                  Partition 2 : nvd0p2 - the main Freebsd root or 'pfSense' - 106 Gb
                  Partition 3 : nvd0p3 - "freebsd-swap" so there is one - 5,5 Gb

                  So, the swap space is there, but FreeeBSD isn't using it ?

                  My /etc/fstab :

                  # Device                Mountpoint      FStype  Options         Dump    Pass#
                  /dev/msdosfs/EFISYS     /boot/efi       msdosfs rw,noatime,noauto       0       0
                  /dev/gptid/6a2f135c-af59-11ec-b93b-90ec7729392c		none	swap	sw		0	0
                  

                  Where "6a2f135c-af59-11ec-b93b-90ec7729392c" is nvd0p3 ( ? )

                  A device like /dev/gptid/ isn't listed under /dev/

                  No "help me" PM's please. Use the forum, the community will thank you.
                  Edit : and where are the logs ??

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

                    @gertjan said in Netgate 4100 disk:

                    rawuuid: 6a2f135c-af59-11ec-b93b-90ec7729392c

                    Yes, that's the GPTID of nvd0p3.

                    GertjanG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • GertjanG
                      Gertjan @stephenw10
                      last edited by Gertjan

                      @stephenw10

                      My serial (4100-MAX) console access has always been set to "log to file".
                      So, when I received my device, ir was using 22.01 'as shipped' :
                      From back then

                      ....
                      Configuring crash dumps...
                      No suitable dump device was found.
                      Filesystems are clean, continuing...
                      Mounting filesystems...
                      Mounting ZFS boot environment... done.
                      
                              __
                       _ __  / _|___  ___ _ __  ___  ___      _
                      | '_ \| |_/ __|/ _ \ '_ \/ __|/ _ \   _| |_
                      | |_) |  _\__ \  __/ | | \__ \  __/  |_   _|
                      | .__/|_| |___/\___|_| |_|___/\___|    |_|
                      |_|
                      
                      
                      Welcome to Netgate pfSense Plus 22.01-RELEASE..
                      .....
                      

                      Throwing now "No suitable dump device was found" on every reboot.

                      Is it possible to 'delete' this swap partition, and use, for example,
                      /etc/rc.d/createswap ?
                      Or a command to make it available/usable for FreeBSD ?

                      No "help me" PM's please. Use the forum, the community will thank you.
                      Edit : and where are the logs ??

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

                        Well anything's possible. 😉 But I have never tried that. Especially in ZFS.

                        The fstab does not reference the gptid in any install I have here:

                        [22.05-RELEASE][admin@4100.stevew.lan]/root: cat /etc/fstab
                        # Device		Mountpoint	FStype	Options		Dump	Pass#
                        /dev/gpt/efiboot0		/boot/efi	msdosfs	rw		2	2
                        /dev/nvd0p3		none	swap	sw		0	0
                        

                        So you might try just changing that initially.

                        Steve

                        GertjanG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • GertjanG
                          Gertjan @stephenw10
                          last edited by Gertjan

                          @stephenw10 said in Netgate 4100 disk:

                          So you might try just changing that initially.

                          Yeah, just like that 😕

                          I would love to try things out, but I have only one 4100, and messing around with core boot files is a scary thing.

                          I guess I'll ask for a "22.05" ISO first prepare a new USB boot drive, back the config, wait for the weekend etc ;)

                          edit :

                          Ok, done :

                          24a8f9e0-4ee8-47cc-ba2d-1f321b00a284-image.png

                          I started the stopwatch ;)

                          No "help me" PM's please. Use the forum, the community will thank you.
                          Edit : and where are the logs ??

                          GertjanG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • GertjanG
                            Gertjan @Gertjan
                            last edited by

                            I did it :
                            I changed

                            # Device                Mountpoint      FStype  Options         Dump    Pass#
                            /dev/msdosfs/EFISYS     /boot/efi       msdosfs rw,noatime,noauto       0       0
                            /dev/gptid/6a2f135c-af59-11ec-b93b-90ec7729392c		none	swap	sw		0 0
                            

                            for

                            # Device                Mountpoint      FStype  Options         Dump    Pass#
                            /dev/msdosfs/EFISYS     /boot/efi       msdosfs rw,noatime,noauto       0       0
                            /dev/nvd0p3		none		swap	sw		0	0
                            

                            and suddenly, after reboot, I have a swap partition :

                            0bfa1530-daf3-4c61-9a0b-ad6a3116d6f8-image.png

                            No "help me" PM's please. Use the forum, the community will thank you.
                            Edit : and where are the logs ??

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