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    Why PFsense sucks

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General pfSense Questions
    29 Posts 21 Posters 16.8k Views
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    • D
      dhatz
      last edited by

      @submicron:

      I can't decide if this was a troll or if this guy was legitimate.  I'm not sure which would be funnier.

      My thoughts exactly…

      Hmmm, pfSense or WinXP+NAT32, that's a tough decision  ;D

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      • M
        mililani
        last edited by

        Here's even more weirdness about PfSense.  So, even after reloading the filters and rules that I recreated last night, PfSense would not see past the external gateway.  I checked the routing tables, deleted the routes, rebooted, and rechecked the tables.  Looked fine.  Anyways, still, I couldn't ping anything outside of the local domain on the WAN interface.  It was late at night, I left it alone and went to bed.  The next morning I check it out and it's miraculously working!!  WTF???

        I run this setup on a small ASUS 2G Surf laptop.  It's really no different than the network appliances you guys recommend people to use for PfSense.  Sometimes our gateway will be mobile using a long range point to point connection.  Most of the times it will be local.  It is important for me to test the current draw using either system.  I also notice the snide remarks and all I can say is sorry to crap on your beloved software.  From my experience, wireless as the WAN interface just blows.

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        • P
          podilarius
          last edited by

          mililani … I agree that wireless as a WAN sucks. But for me that sucks universally. pfSense once tweaked was still more stable than the last wireless for WAN that I used. That didn't last long as it was temporarily borrowing WAN from a friend while I waited for hookup.

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          • ?
            Guest
            last edited by

            @mililani:

            I also notice the snide remarks and all I can say is sorry to crap on your beloved software.  From my experience, wireless as the WAN interface just blows.

            The snide remarks were more in response to your comparison between pfSense and WindowsXP+NAT.  Its true that wireless as your primary Internet connection is painful at best, but its not exactly fair to blame pfSense for that.

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            • C
              Cino
              last edited by

              I have to stop reading this thread as it just cracks me up. I'll agree that wireless support sucks but that doesn't have to do with pfSense for the most part but with the FreeBSD OS that is the foundation for pfSense. Check out the forums at freebsd.org and you will notice that wireless interfaces aren't 100% stable. This have to do with the drivers that are develop for FreeBSD. You just can't try a card in the box and expect it to be 100% stable without researching the wifi card and its driver for freebsd. There are some card that are 100% stable and user's love them.

              If you have to use a wireless wan, do some research on this forum and freebsd.org and find a card that everyone agrees is stable or just go out and buy a Wireless AP to handle the wifi part and connect it to your pfSense box.

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              • stephenw10S
                stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                last edited by

                @Cino:

                You just can't try a card in the box and expect it to be 100% stable without researching the wifi card and its driver for freebsd.

                I think that says it all. For many people that is a reason why pfSense sucks. For a M$ based solution (and increasingly Linux) you can just try a card and have a reasonable expectation that it will work well.
                As pfSense becomes more popular it is inevitable that more first time users are going to be disappointed. There are probably far more satisfied users but most of those don't complain.  ;)

                Steve

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                • C
                  cougarmaster
                  last edited by

                  Why on earth would anyone complain for a piece of software that is FREE and free to change to anyway you like. Opensource is about collaborating and sharing of knowledge. The developers have given a lot to the project without asking you for a single dime (but of course you can donate or purchase support which would help them a lot to get more full time developers). I have these routers running in production environments for business where it is critical to them. Yes I am facing many problems but this forum itself is paying off as I would have been paying thousands of dollars for similar knowledge from other solutions. Please think before blaming anything.

                  Eric

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                  • D
                    dnky_bones
                    last edited by

                    lol….What a great thread!  Reminds me of the MaximumPC threads back in the 90's.  I had figured that most trolls had by now contented themselves with participating in flame wars on YouTube comment threads...this OG troll is kicking it old school.  Bravo!!

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                    • F
                      fluca1978
                      last edited by

                      @stephenw10:

                      I think that says it all. For many people that is a reason why pfSense sucks. For a M$ based solution (and increasingly Linux) you can just try a card and have a reasonable expectation that it will work well.

                      And do not forget that if you are going to build a decent firewall (and a server too), you first have to select good hardware, check that it is compatible and then install and run it. There is no point in being able to support a low-cost crappy wireless card if only a few are running a firewall with it; supporting good hardware matters most. This is not meant to be that FreeBSD (and pfsense) do not have to support all the hardware, but having a priority to good and server level one. That is my opinion.

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                      • C
                        cmb
                        last edited by

                        @stephenw10:

                        @Cino:

                        You just can't try a card in the box and expect it to be 100% stable without researching the wifi card and its driver for freebsd.

                        I think that says it all. For many people that is a reason why pfSense sucks. For a M$ based solution (and increasingly Linux) you can just try a card and have a reasonable expectation that it will work well.
                        As pfSense becomes more popular it is inevitable that more first time users are going to be disappointed. There are probably far more satisfied users but most of those don't complain.  ;)

                        Yeah this entire thread can be summarized as FreeBSD's wireless drivers for some cards really suck, and on the rest the guy has no idea what he's doing, things like creating MAC address conflicts and wondering why the network breaks.

                        But Linux has much the same issues with drivers, you really have to research your cards before you buy one especially since many of the bigger manufacturers (DLink, Linksys, etc.) will change the chipset used in their cards without changing the model # at all, so even finding a working model # on some cards is no assurance you're going to get the same card they used to sell under that model.

                        It looks like the situation with wireless will be getting a lot better with FreeBSD 9. Adrian Chadd has done quite a bit of work in FreeBSD 9 for a commercial software company that uses FreeBSD in their appliances and relies heavily on wireless. I have hopes that will be a great step forward on wireless.

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