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    Pfsense 2.0 and Xenserver HowTo

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Virtualization
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    • T
      tommyboy180
      last edited by

      Confirmed working on XenServer 5.6Sp2 and 6.0

      At the boot menu choose option 7 "Escape to loader prompt"

      set hw.clflush_disable=1
      boot
      

      Install pfSense.

      After the installation, add the following line to /boot/loader.conf by running the following command from the shell prompt.

      echo "hw.clflush_disable=1" >> /boot/loader.conf 
      

      All credit goes to wmlaros

      -Tom Schaefer
      SuperMicro 1U 2X Intel pro/1000 Dual Core Intel 2.2 Ghz - 2 Gig RAM

      Please support pfBlocker | File Browser | Strikeback

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      • marcellocM
        marcelloc
        last edited by

        Great news. Thanks to wmlaros and you tommyboy180.
        :)

        Treinamentos de Elite: http://sys-squad.com

        Help a community developer! ;D

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        • D
          dscline
          last edited by

          Are these options required for all pfsense on Xenserver installations, or is this specific to AMD systems?  This page on installing pfsense on Hyper-v says to use these same options, claiming:

          Apparently FreeBSD 8 has a problem with AMD 64 processors which prevents them from booting in virtual environments. A workaround is to choose option 7 "Escape to loader prompt" …

          And it appears from this page that everyone that was having issues had an AMD system.

          I'm completely new to pfsense and VMs, but I'm trying to dive in and figure it out.  I'm on an Intel system, so I'm just wondering if this is something I need to (or even should) do.

          Thanks!

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