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    Why should I use pfSense?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Off-Topic & Non-Support Discussion
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    • G
      giantjoebot
      last edited by

      Checked prices for intel NIC's on newegg, and the checked ebay, and wow ebay is way cheaper.  So if I got the dual port NIC, do I have to 2 connections right now, or can I enable that latter?

      So no black list huh, hmmm….. that sucks

      Well its not that big of a deal.  I already block everything on my desktops with adblock.  I was hoping that it might help reduce spyware and such, but I don't seem to have any real issues there.  I never seem to get any viruses or spyware, except tracking cookies.  I guess it can't have everything.

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      • T
        trendchiller
        last edited by

        you have got 2 connections from the start… they are recognized as 2 different nics and in a future version you can bundle them with FEC and else ...
        and for the blocklist:

        just paste the adblock content to the blacklist field in the squid package

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        • G
          giantjoebot
          last edited by

          OK.  I'm almost sold.  I just have one more question, and I'm going to repeat one from my original post.

          You said that its fast, but is it faster?  Like is it faster than IPCop, Smoothy, ect…  I actually want to know if its faster than ClarkConnect, because Ive been trying to decide between these 2

          So what do you like about pfSense?  or What makes you use pfSense over other firewalls?

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          • C
            cmb
            last edited by

            Any of them will perform basically equally, assuming your hardware is adequately sized. On some hardware FreeBSD (hence pfSense) is faster than Linux, on some Linux is faster than FreeBSD, but on most it's mostly a crap shoot. The main performance considerations are how much bandwidth can it push, and what packets per second rate can it handle, all without drastically increasing latency. None of that is a concern with either OS with properly sized hardware because you'll have something with adequate capacity that the small differences that may be present won't matter.

            It really shouldn't be a consideration in which to choose - look at other things.

            One exception might be if you're forced to push a lot of traffic through a slow machine. In that case you want m0n0wall 1.2x, it's based on an older FreeBSD release that blows away Linux and the new FreeBSD release pfSense uses - with slow, undersized hardware (talking sub-300 MHz and 50+ Mb throughput requirement).

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            • G
              giantjoebot
              last edited by

              I had heard that m0n0wall was really good, but it doesn't have squid which is why I won't use it.  Squid is a must have for me.

              So if pfSense isn't faster, then it must be the features.  The feature that I want from pfSense that the others I'm looking at don't have is the SSL wrapper.  Basicly I'm just trying to decide which firewall to use.  I have seen a lot of posts by people in various forums and such that say pfSense is the best, but they don't say why.  There generally statements like, "pfSense is way better", or something like that.  What I want to know is why is it better.  What is it about pfSense that you guys like better than the other firewalls?  Honestly I've been considering this and ClarkConnect.  ClarkConnect has a much better website IMO, and I can see its features very clearly, and everything is laid out so that its easy to understand.  I just  can't seem to get the same out of pfSense's website, so I came here to see what was great about it.  On the other hand I have yet to get on ClarkConnect's forum.  I have been waiting for a confirmation email so that I can login, but I think that is probably due to the crapy secondary email account that I used to sign up, I think its jacked up right now because it doesn't seem to be receiving any new mail.  Sorry for the tangent.

              So why do you like pfSense?

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              • S
                sullrich
                last edited by

                Why not try out pfSense and judge for yourself.  You are asking questions that will obviously result in biased opinions.

                It's a liveCD.  Pop it in and start playing around with it… your wasting valuable time waiting for biased answers when you could be experimenting on your own :)

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                • G
                  giantjoebot
                  last edited by

                  Well the hardware is being used for a server at the moment, and doesn't have all the hardware it need right now, so I can't really do that yet.  I do this a lot, I start thinking about something and can't get it out of my brain until I figure it out.  Maybe its because I'm a Virgo.  You do have a point, there are other things that I should be doing right now, but to be honest I enjoy this stuff.

                  Who the hell else I'm I going to ask about pfSense.  It only makes sense to ask the people that use it about it.

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                  • Cry HavokC
                    Cry Havok
                    last edited by

                    Well, grab a copy of VMWare (there's a 30 day trial) and play with pfSense there.  It's simple and painless :)

                    As for who else to ask - sullrich's point is very valid - people here are naturally going to tell you to dump your current choice and use pfSense.

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                    • H
                      hoba
                      last edited by

                      VMware Server is completely free btw and will run pfSense just fine.

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                      • G
                        giantjoebot
                        last edited by

                        OK I'll check it out.

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                        • J
                          jeroen234
                          last edited by

                          you say that squid is a must for you

                          you now that when you use squid you only use the the first wan and never the second wan ??
                          squid and all other aplications that run on the pfsense server can only make use of the first wan

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                          • G
                            giantjoebot
                            last edited by

                            No I didn't know that.  Thanks for telling me, thats pretty important.

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