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    pfSense 2.8.0 full iso/img

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Problems Installing or Upgrading pfSense Software
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    • stephenw10S
      stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
      last edited by stephenw10

      You can also just install 2.7.2 and upgrade to 2.8 if your WAN doesn't allow using the current net installer. The upcoming net installer does allow a lot more options there.

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        dark.baritone
        last edited by dark.baritone

        @stephenw10 please stop offering that as a solution. That will only be a possible solution until there's an upgrade to pfSense that offers an installable solution that is not available in 2.7.2.

        For example, if ZFS was not offered in 2.7.2, but was in 2.8.0, then the only way to get ZFS would be to use the inferior installer and hence would not be able to be installed offline.

        And to be clear, I'm a Plus customer and also find the online installer unacceptable. I have no problem paying for software.

        It would be entirely possible to have the Plus activation key, once registered on an online system, to generate a system-specific installer key that could be derived with the activation token so that an offline install could be done while verifying (without internet access) that it had previously been installed on that system. Once the system goes online, it can do a further verification to make sure nothing had been spoofed.

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          chrcoluk @elvisimprsntr
          last edited by chrcoluk

          @elvisimprsntr I think the closest one might get is install 2.8 somewhere, then make an image of the installation, recover the image as a means of a offline install.

          Luckily upgrading from 2.7.2 to 2.8 was easy for me, so the upgrade path at this time isnt a large chasm. So I do think a 2.7.2 install followed by in place upgrade is still a viable way to do it.

          pfSense CE 2.8.0

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          • Q
            quantum007
            last edited by

            @stephenw10
            Several customers, including myself, have raised valid concerns about requiring an internet connection for the installer. While the stated rationale—“Having a single installer for both CE and Plus reduces the test load and potential for bugs”—is understandable, it does not prevent the option of also providing a USB or ISO image, or even a tool to generate offline installation media from the net installer.

            Netgate should seriously consider this feedback. Ignoring customer needs, especially from those managing large deployments, complex networks, or high-security environments, risks losing them to competitors like OPNsense, Sophos, Juniper, or Palo Alto. These are not fringe use cases—they represent significant, enterprise-level customers.

            Positioning pfSense primarily for home office or SMB deployments while closing the door on broader markets to simplify internal release processes is a short-sighted strategy. Listening to your customers is not just good practice—it's essential to maintaining relevance and market share in a competitive space.

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            • chpalmerC
              chpalmer
              last edited by

              As a remote radio tech that goes to places that I only might have microwave backhaul with no DHCP server on the far end...

              I do not like this because I now have to set up equipment that I might not have before I left the shop.. but-

              I like the idea of being forced to set up my equipment in the shop before I leave and not be such a lazy ass. I have a simple lab.. why don't I use it?!?

              I carry a cellular router everywhere I go.. but I don't have service everywhere I go.- (if you are truly talking about your employment here then why don't you have one?)

              But I can go back to where I have service... coffee shop, truck stop.. ect.. and set up my equipment there.. if I didn't at the shop.. and explain to the accountant why I charged such a long lunch to the company account.. 🤔

              Hmmm pros and cons.. Yes it will take some out of their comfort zone. Yes I am sure that Netgate is taking notes. And no I do not have any problem with Netgate grabbing some user statistics to let them know how to proceed in the future.

              One more pro- don't have to constantly keep up with the newest version on my memory stick.

              Triggering snowflakes one by one..
              Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-4590T CPU @ 2.00GHz on an M400 WG box.

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              • JonathanLeeJ
                JonathanLee
                last edited by JonathanLee

                You know I wanted to chime in and say I love the Squid package. However back to this new installer topic, it's designed to be a "white glove" install, meaning you do nothing and the install configures everything while the software comes down and it is all per user contract request. It can be as customized as you want and it is set up perfectly per the spec requested every time. Look so many vendors have moved to this way of things.... look at Windows 11, and many other IT vendors for banking technology. This started many years ago, and now with the bandwidth we got today, its just gonna get worse... It is just like the dumb terminals of the 80s, that with a mix of the speed of today alongside our complex software setups that are reaching several GB in size - maybe even TB in size in the near future. Look we have got the ability to have software alongside config pushed down in a few seconds by way of today's bandwidth so why not use it. Any one of our configs could be pushed into a white box easily over and over again if we so desired. It's the future just embrace it. I don't like it either but I have experienced this change back in 2009. I use to have to carry books of software for everything while in the field once it moved to whiteglove it was so simple no one needed us anymore it was plug in and push a button. It was so easy. This is the future get use to it as to many things could go wrong with the old way of things, this is simply risk mitigation, and this is cyber security. Whitegloved config + software downloaded at a keystroke will be the future way of professional grade installs, with the config done long before it gets to any install team. Again this is for mass installs across huge networks with many remote offices. Even so they will always have a backup plan or that emergency flash drive option ...

                Make sure to upvote

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                  quantum007 @JonathanLee
                  last edited by

                  @JonathanLee

                  Most software deployments don't accompany fresh hardware installs and not all systems are allowed to touch the internet. Secure enclaves, classified environments, and sometimes just network design create areas where, once a device is installed, it is never going to see the internet again. Forcing isolated systems to require internet connections for updates is not cyber security, it is just Netgate streamlining their release process. Netgate can choose to lose those customers or support high security environments. I believe that closing the door on those markets is short-sighted, you may feel differently.

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                  • P
                    pwood999
                    last edited by

                    Just to add to this, my home install was easy but did require multiple hops. 2.7.2 used static IP to my internet router, so to install 2.8 meant I have to install, and then spend time reconfiguring the WAN plus various other stuff.

                    The Lab at work was another story, because like others the WAN uses VLAN's which I could not see any way to configure in the installer. Online upgrade was less than ideal, so we ended up doing it all at home & then taking the box to the work lab.

                    Remote offices would have been a complete PITA so they are still on 2.7.2

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                      Popolou @pwood999
                      last edited by

                      @pwood999 Now imagine what it is like for us in DC's.

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                      • D
                        dark.baritone
                        last edited by

                        I want to be very careful here. As much as I'm very adamant that the offline installer should not have been removed. The business concern is that there are people freeloading off of the software who have ample resources to pay for it. While there are gray areas, I think we can all agree that someone like Amazon should be paying for the software they use. I think we can all also agree that if there's someone out there selling an unofficial pfSense appliance, that company should be paying for pfSense.

                        The problem that the pfSense team is trying to solve with the online installer is the freeloader problem described above. I think this was the wrong way to approach this, but we have to understand where they were coming from and realize that just saying "give us back the offline installer" is not productive because it doesn't solve their problem. We need to be talking in terms that supports an offline installer AND ALSO helps solve their freeloader problem.

                        Additionally when we use the word "customer" (someone who pays for a product) when we really mean "user", it conflates things. If everyone who used pfSense was indeed a "customer", then I don't think we would have ever ended up with an online-only installer.

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                          revengineer @dark.baritone
                          last edited by

                          @dark-baritone Per the title of the topic, we are specifically requesting the release of an image for the CE edition. This edition is free and freeloading is allowed and perhaps encouraged. I understand that there have been issues with abuse of the plus edition, and if this needs to be protected as a consequence then so be it.

                          (A comment on the latter, the abuse could have been stopped by placing a one time fee on the plus version. Unfortunately, the introduction of a $100+ annual fee has put this edition out of reach for me as a home user. It may not seem much, but with so many companies fee-ing us to death with daily/monthly/annual subscriptions, one has to make choices. I considered replacing my firewall with netgate hardware, but a version that mounts into my small rack and offers the same performance as my re-used hardware is also out of my financial reach. I wish I could do better.)

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                            Patch @revengineer
                            last edited by

                            @revengineer said in pfSense 2.8.0 full iso/img:

                            we are specifically requesting the release of an image for the CE edition. This edition is free

                            A desirable feature of firewall software.

                            Your challenge is Netgate are a for profit company with employees which would like to be paid.
                            For any relationship to survive long term it needs to be win - win.

                            So the interesting bit is how is Netgate helped by CE and how is it harmed.

                            • CE having a desirable feature not also available on plus would cause harm to Netgate

                            • Free debugging and beta testing by CE user has helped plus customers in the past. The changed development cycle has reduced this benefit over the last couple of years. In fact separate testing and release of CE may have become a net negative for Netgate.

                            So from a purely technical perspective adding a separate feature to CE maybe relatively straight forward (it has been done in the past). From a business perspective achieving what you would like is a very long shot on it's own imo.

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                              jdeloach @Patch
                              last edited by jdeloach

                              This post is deleted!
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                                pwood999 @Popolou
                                last edited by

                                @Popolou Yes I know. In my case we are small innovation team with limited budget. Once projects go to production teams, they purchase their network kit with support contracts as well.

                                This raises another question for me, i,e; Does the latest paid for version come with offline ISO for installs ?

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                                  Popolou @dark.baritone
                                  last edited by Popolou

                                  @dark-baritone No, Netgate never made any correlation between moving to the net installer and the desire to workaround the "freeloaders". It was understood (heard from certain circles) that someone internal to the business took this decision without any wider consultation ostensibly for the reasons we've come to hear publicly on the forums.

                                  If there was any genuine intention to follow community wishes, it is not technically beyond them to provide an option to build an ISO via the installer which downloads the latest version and packages it to a single image.

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                                  • JonathanLeeJ
                                    JonathanLee
                                    last edited by

                                    Another potential talking point is that this approach could allow Netgate to access user bases in countries where certain software packages are restricted or unavailable. For example, Squid's ability to perform SSL interception using CA certificates is considered illegal in some countries outside the United States. By identifying the user's IP address, it may be possible to tailor or restrict software features based on the user's location, thereby enabling the creation of country-specific versions of the software at the time of download.

                                    In my case, I encountered issues when I needed a specific older version of the software that supported the SafeXcel cryptographic accelerator. Fortunately, I still have a USB copy of that version, but looking ahead, there’s a concern: if older versions are no longer allowed or accessible, users like me won’t be able to revert to a setup that worked reliably should they need to. This could create challenges for those who depend on legacy hardware or specific features that are no longer supported in newer releases.

                                    Make sure to upvote

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                                      Popolou @pwood999
                                      last edited by

                                      @pwood999 said in pfSense 2.8.0 full iso/img:

                                      This raises another question for me, i,e; Does the latest paid for version come with offline ISO for installs ?

                                      No, they all use the net installer now by design.

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                                      • S
                                        scottjh1
                                        last edited by scottjh1

                                        Previously I used Sophos UTM9. In order to get the ISO you were required to register with Sophos, receiving a license key. For home users it was free as is Pfsense CE. The software would work for 30 days absent of installing the key. If a license was not applied it would become unusable. I believe Pfsense/Netgate should consider a similar option. My reasoning is the user now has a full off line install eliminating the security issues of a online install. Additionally Netgate and is able to track how many devices the software is installed on under a free license. Building on this model would open the door to determine if Pfsense CE is being used in commercial installations where a paid license should have been purchased. The question of security comes up when putting a home device on the internet with no protection while doing a remote install. What level of protection is given to the box as it is installing? The model indicates none. Many users may not have a a second router to put in front of the the device while the install is underway. Personally I would not even consider directly connecting any device to the internet without a firewall to protect it.

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                                        • R
                                          revengineer
                                          last edited by

                                          pfSense CE is based on an open source project and thought that this would come come some moral obligations. I understand that it may not be a legal obligation to offer a stand-alone installer, and I assume that the source code is public tot he degree required. I no longer pay attention to this as the source has never been in a form where it could be compiled by a user.

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                                          • joshgreyzJ
                                            joshgreyz @quantum007
                                            last edited by

                                            @quantum007 said in pfSense 2.8.0 full iso/img:

                                            The move to a unified installer I can understand a bit, but the lack of offline install support is a bad move by Netgate. With this single decision Netgate has chosen to almost completely eliminate themselves as a option for every non-internet connected, high security, or classified system around the globe. I highly suggest Netgate reconsider releasing offline install packages.

                                            This sums it all up nicely

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