VIrtualized pfSense (Proxmox) with WiFi - possible?
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I have moved my pfSense to a Promox 8.1.3 server with a 4-port PCI NIC card and for the last week - seems to be running fine.
I would like to, I think, add a PCI WiFi card to this Proxmox host and add it to pfSense?
Anyone done this? Drawbacks? Advantages? Ounces of blood needed to make it work ?
Any reason not to have pfSense be my WiFi AP? I would like to find something to replace the Netgear ORBI system I have. When you put it into AP mode - it locks a lot of things down.
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I mean it probably would work with a compatible card. But running an external AP is superior in just about every way that matters. Mostly in supported link types. pfSense will not support anything better than 802.11n. So the best you can do is a 3x3 N NIC which gives a theoretical 450Mbps but in reality 200-300Mbps on a good day.
If you want to have some fun get any old AP that supports OpenWRT and you'll have just about any function you could imagine.
Steve
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The ORBI 'supposedly' will do that. What I wish I could find is a way to add WiFi that is not one of these Wi-Fi router/AP/firewall things. Like the UniFi stuff - that is not thousands of $$.
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@bearhntr I run Proxmox with a VM for pfsense.
For wifi I run another Proxmox VM running the Unifi controller application. Separate Unifi AP as required. It works well.
See
https://community.ui.com/questions/UniFi-Installation-Scripts-or-UniFi-Easy-Update-Script-or-UniFi-Lets-Encrypt-or-UniFi-Easy-Encrypt-/ccbc7530-dd61-40a7-82ec-22b17f027776
and
https://help.ui.com/hc/en-us/articles/115012196527-UNMS-Installation-Guide -
A single Unifi AP is not that expensive. Plenty of other options. Especially if you include something used with OpenWRT on it.
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@Patch said in VIrtualized pfSense (Proxmox) with WiFi - possible?:
For wifi I run another Proxmox VM running the Unifi controller application. Separate Unifi AP as required. It works well.
This looks kinda interesting - can you elaborate?
@Patch said in VIrtualized pfSense (Proxmox) with WiFi - possible?:
See
https://community.ui.com/questions/UniFi-Installation-Scripts-or-UniFi-Easy-Update-Script-or-UniFi-Lets-Encrypt-or-UniFi-Easy-Encrypt-/ccbc7530-dd61-40a7-82ec-22b17f027776
and
https://help.ui.com/hc/en-us/articles/115012196527-UNMS-Installation-GuideThis script seems to be a Linux (Ubuntu/Debian) I does not mention Proxmox.
I was also looking at the TP-Link 6E router with satellite (their mesh system) this past weekend. Which seems like what my ORBI is - just a little smaller and have WiFi 6E.
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@stephenw10 said in VIrtualized pfSense (Proxmox) with WiFi - possible?:
A single Unifi AP is not that expensive. Plenty of other options. Especially if you include something used with OpenWRT on it.
You mean you can have just UniFI AP without all the other stuff?
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@bearhntr Mostly, you need the AP and the manager. I loaded the manager (I forget what it is called) on a Linux VM. No other Unifi HW is needed.
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You don't even need the manager if you don't need the featured that require it be always on. Like captive portal. It has been a while, I put OpenWRT on my Unifi AP, but last time I tried you can setup the AP using only a phone app.
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@bearhntr said in VIrtualized pfSense (Proxmox) with WiFi - possible?:
This script seems to be a Linux (Ubuntu/Debian) I does not mention Proxmox.
Correct.
- Create a VM in Proxmox
- Load your prefered Linux from the variants supported by the Unifi controller software
- Install the Unifi controller software via the above script
- Run this VM & set up your controller
- Power up a wired Unifi AP which you can then adopt into your Unifi controller software / VM
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@Patch , @stephenw10 and @AndyRH
Thank you all - I have been wanting to do a full UniFI system in the house for 6+ years. This house was built in 1989 (and the first owner (I am 2nd) was not super-tech savvy apparently). I have 2 phone jacks in the entire house (one on the wall in the kitchen, one in the master bedroom). There is one cable port in the whole house (in the den - opposite end of the house from the office/bedrooms). When I moved in, there was a satellite dish on the back of the house and 2 line running from it along the outside of the house (one to the master bedroom, and one to the box outside which leads to the single cable jack in the house).
I had to be creative with getting Internet throughout the house....so I got the ORBI system (first I had a D-Link 860L with a satellite - but was constantly plagued with dropouts and slow speeds), and the ORBI worked great for years.
I started researching UniFI system as a way to put an Ethernet port in every room (or more) and to put a wireless AP in the bedroom end, one in the kitchen/den end and maybe one outside. My plan was to put this stuff into the house using the attic for running wires as I am on concrete slab and can access every room via the attic. Then the pandemic hit and the world went insane.... lol I was sent home to work, and a role change took nearly $20k out of my salary as company restructured.
So here today with the wish/desire to start-up that original goal/project in some fashion. I am thinking that I definitely want 6E Wi-Fi, Wi-Fi 7 I think it too new and not really ready for prime-time play.
If I were to go full-on setup (but cheaply - not spending $1000's) I know the CAT5E or CAT6 cable I will need is going to cost me a fortune...what would you recommend? I do want 2 APs in the house - and while I have a SmartHome 'growing monthly', most things are Z-Wave or Zigbee...would like to have a consideration for Wi-Fi IoT devices too, maybe even in their own segment.
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The cable itself should not be expensive. If you have to have it installed rather than installing it yourself that is going to be more obviously.
Real APs mounted on the ceiling are so much better it's worth putting in wiring for that if you can.
You can run multiple SSIDs on different VLANs on Unifi APs or any OpenWRT compatible device.
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That is my hope to do PoE and mount the APs to the ceiling (one in the hall between the 4 bedrooms and one in the kitchen/breakfast/den area). I have a ranch home, so all on one level.
Thanks Again