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    pfSense® Software Embraces Change: A Strategic Migration to the Linux Kernel

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Netgate Announcements
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    • M
      mcury @Gertjan
      last edited by

      The best day to say something like that is today..
      If the repercussion is horrible, they just could say: HAHA April fools.. 😆

      dead on arrival, nowhere to be found.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
      • M
        michmoor LAYER 8 Rebel Alliance
        last edited by michmoor

        I will say that if you are on the Reddit forums for pfsense - Gonzopacho - i think is the name did mention that pfSense will be moving to Linux..or something to that effect..a while ago.
        I don't think this is a april fools joke. This is the real deal.

        Firewall: NetGate,Palo Alto-VM,Juniper SRX
        Routing: Juniper, Arista, Cisco
        Switching: Juniper, Arista, Cisco
        Wireless: Unifi, Aruba IAP
        JNCIP,CCNP Enterprise

        S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
        • S
          SteveITS Galactic Empire @michmoor
          last edited by

          @michmoor https://www.reddit.com/r/PFSENSE/comments/1bt3whd/pfsense_software_embraces_change_a_strategic/

          If true it's a really bad day to announce it.

          The thing is they moved TNSR to Linux a while back, as the post notes.

          Pre-2.7.2/23.09: Only install packages for your version, or risk breaking it. Select your branch in System/Update/Update Settings.
          When upgrading, allow 10-15 minutes to restart, or more depending on packages and device speed.
          Upvote 👍 helpful posts!

          M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • M
            michmoor LAYER 8 Rebel Alliance @SteveITS
            last edited by

            @SteveITS
            Oh i agree. Communication has never been Netgate's strength as we know.
            That being the case, i still think this is legit.

            Firewall: NetGate,Palo Alto-VM,Juniper SRX
            Routing: Juniper, Arista, Cisco
            Switching: Juniper, Arista, Cisco
            Wireless: Unifi, Aruba IAP
            JNCIP,CCNP Enterprise

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • rcfaR
              rcfa
              last edited by

              The blog post makes a bunch of valid points, in particular the matter about WiFi support, support for hardware platforms, etc.
              So it's plausible and there are points to be made for such a shift. But the timing is either a giveaway, or badly chosen.
              In a time when satire has trouble keeping up with reality, if this is an April Foolsday post, it's deceptively close to something believable.

              the otherT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • the otherT
                the other @rcfa
                last edited by

                @rcfa said in pfSense® Software Embraces Change: A Strategic Migration to the Linux Kernel:

                if this is an April Foolsday post, it's deceptively close to something believable.

                but isn't that the spice of every good prank? I mean, announcing "hey guys, we finally give up, opnsense is way better...so with our upcoming release everything will look kinda orange..." wouldn't really do the job. 🤡
                Much better to pick something that makes ppl laugh...but leaves a small nagging uncertainty in your head...until finally on April 2nd that feeling of relieve hits.😊

                the other

                pure amateur home user, no business or professional background
                please excuse poor english skills and typpoz :)

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • planedropP
                  planedrop
                  last edited by

                  I feel like this is legit, but what a terrible day to announce it....

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Y
                    YannTKO
                    last edited by YannTKO

                    As you know, 24.03 will be probably the last update for 32 bit ARM proc.
                    Moving to Linux Kernel (if it is not a joke) is maybe the solution to keep old hardware working (all the 3100 fleet for example).

                    Netgate SG-3100 23.09.1
                    Unifi UAP: 1x FlexHD + 2x nanoHD + 1x AC-IW | Unifi USW: 1x16-PoE Gen2 + 4x US-8-60W | Cloudkey Gen2 Plus
                    1 x NUC8i7BEH 32Go - ESXI 8 (Pfsense + many VM)

                    planedropP JonathanLeeJ 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • planedropP
                      planedrop @YannTKO
                      last edited by

                      @YannTKO That would be nice, I have some 3100's deployed that I'd prefer not to swap out.

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

                        It should be Xenix

                        $mkuser pfContainerOSfingerprintingPlease

                        Make sure to upvote

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

                          @CreationGuy I’m certain its a joke given the date and the “BSD userland” comment, but honestly…
                          I really think they should consider a move to Linux even though that would be a massive undertaking.
                          Truth is BSD is dying when it comes to new hardware and developer support.
                          Fx: We need modern LTE/5G/WiFi support for more WAN flexibility.

                          It would be better to embrace it and try before its too late - because its going to become too late at some point.

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

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

                            @YannTKO said in pfSense® Software Embraces Change: A Strategic Migration to the Linux Kernel:

                            ARM

                            ARM is the future. You can embrace it or get out of the way for the next generation of professional programmers. I am sure everyone is well aware of the power of Raspberry PI ARM systems with the flag ship quad core x64 and it doesn't need heat sinks all under 100 dollars. ARM is are never going away. ARM will only grow its market share at this point. Apple has even jumped ship over to the M1-now M4. Get over it. The 2100-MAX is a work of programming art.

                            Screenshot 2024-04-01 at 11.40.36.png

                            It reminds me of Cars 3

                            Make sure to upvote

                            Y 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • Y
                              YannTKO @JonathanLee
                              last edited by

                              @JonathanLee
                              I edited my post with 32 bit CPU to be accurate.

                              Netgate SG-3100 23.09.1
                              Unifi UAP: 1x FlexHD + 2x nanoHD + 1x AC-IW | Unifi USW: 1x16-PoE Gen2 + 4x US-8-60W | Cloudkey Gen2 Plus
                              1 x NUC8i7BEH 32Go - ESXI 8 (Pfsense + many VM)

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • planedropP
                                planedrop @keyser
                                last edited by

                                @keyser No BSD Userland is a thing, it's been done before, recently: https://www.phoronix.com/news/Chimera-Linux-2022

                                I don't think this indicates it's a joke at all.

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

                                  @planedrop ?? What would be the point of making a stategic move to a modern kernel only to lock yourself into a frankenmonster that will be unflexible and missing everything you are missing on the current limited BSD world?

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

                                  planedropP G 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • planedropP
                                    planedrop @keyser
                                    last edited by

                                    @keyser I'm not sure, not a dev so I don't really know the ins and outs, I just know that it's been done before (see that article, it talks about some benefits).

                                    S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • S
                                      SteveITS Galactic Empire @planedrop
                                      last edited by

                                      https://www.reddit.com/r/freebsd/comments/1bhvt2e/comment/kvulz1m/

                                      ">...are you also saying Netgate is on a path to abandon FreeBSD?

                                      No.
                                      That doesn’t mean you won’t, say, see a variant of pfsense on Linux."

                                      ...and from the Reddit link I posted earlier:
                                      "The FreeBSD userland (and musl for libc) is actually true"

                                      🤔

                                      Pre-2.7.2/23.09: Only install packages for your version, or risk breaking it. Select your branch in System/Update/Update Settings.
                                      When upgrading, allow 10-15 minutes to restart, or more depending on packages and device speed.
                                      Upvote 👍 helpful posts!

                                      planedropP S 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • planedropP
                                        planedrop @SteveITS
                                        last edited by

                                        @SteveITS Interesting, yeah I'm still leaning towards this all being legit. Wish Netgate would confirm or would have put something at the top that clarified it's not april fools.

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                        • AndyRHA
                                          AndyRH
                                          last edited by

                                          By saying nothing else, the ones that actually know get to see the debate and either enjoy the comments or look for the general mood of such a change. I am enjoying the debate...

                                          If it matters, I do not care, I want to turn on the firewall, it to do the job for a year without interruption before the next code load and then go again. I just want super solid and to never to have to touch it. Linux, FreeBSD, AIX, IBMi, or C-64, just don't care.

                                          o||||o
                                          7100-1u

                                          planedropP S 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 3
                                          • planedropP
                                            planedrop @AndyRH
                                            last edited by

                                            @AndyRH I too want stability, though I think it's worth saying that updates should be done anytime they are out regardless.

                                            either way, I think with Linux being used we could see some nice features and possible better performance.

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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