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    "most" Atheros wifi cards work?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Wireless
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    • jimpJ
      jimp Rebel Alliance Developer Netgate
      last edited by

      No, I don't know the model, the only number anywhere on it that I remember is the chip. Searching on that gives 4-5 results on eBay still though.

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      • E
        Efonnes
        last edited by

        On my cards, I had to make a change to the driver source like the patch on this ticket I posted to get multi-AP mode to actually be useful: http://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/1104
        Without that, every AP on the card gets the same BSSID, which makes it impossible to connect to all but one of the hosted APs.

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        • D
          Doktor Jones
          last edited by

          @torontob:

          I think there has been a surge of people asking for Wireless devices compatible with pfSense […] All other comparable open-source projects do better than pfSense in this area.

          I'm sorry, but this bit made me smile.  I initially attempted to set up my router-firewall-box as a SmoothWall box, because I'd had prior experience with SmoothWall.  When I went on their forums and asked about wireless support, I literally got laughed at.

          Back to the topic at hand, if anyone's looking for a wireless Mini PCI-e card to work with their pfSense box, I can recommend the Atheros AR5BXB92 (AR9280 chipset).  It can be had for $15 on eBay, comes in a half-card format for those using book-size systems like myself, and is quite literally plug-and-play.  I plugged it into my box, booted up, logged into the web interface, added a new LAN interface, and the LAN interface popped in, already pointed at ath0.  From there, I just had to configure the LAN interface with the appropriate wireless parameters (SSID, encryption, etc) and was off and running.

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          • E
            Efonnes
            last edited by

            If you are comparing to a project like OpenWrt, pfSense is definitely lacking in some wireless features compared to it (802.11n is the most mentioned one, but there are some other things lacking).  OpenWrt is actually a quite capable system with support for lots of different configuration types.  While I don't like how some of its configuration screens are set up in the web GUI, there are also some I do like the way they are set up (in trunk version).  The differences in wireless (at least on ath) may become less in the pfSense version after 2.1, which is probably when the new FreeBSD wireless code will get included.  I don't think it will be available for 2.1, unfortunately.

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            • D
              Doktor Jones
              last edited by

              I would consider SmoothWall, IPCop, and the like to be more "comparable" products; full-featured firewall distributions that run on standard x86 architecture.  Of these products, I've found pfSense to have some of the best wireless support.

              OpenWRT and its kin are designed for embedded systems and (to my knowledge) can't be run on an x86 box, so comparing them to pfSense… well maybe it's not quite apples and oranges, but it's at least apples and pears.

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              • stephenw10S
                stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                last edited by

                You can run openwrt and dd-wrt on X86.
                http://downloads.openwrt.org/backfire/10.03.1-rc6/x86_generic/

                I've used it for experimental purposes.

                Steve

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                • E
                  Efonnes
                  last edited by

                  Last I had tried SmoothWall or IPCop (I'll admit it was a while ago), neither had the kinds of NAT or firewall options that pfSense or OpenWrt have.  That it has x86 support and features overall somewhat comparable to pfSense (especially with some of the optional OpenWrt packages) is why I was comparing it to pfSense.  Note that one thing it does not have is AMD64 support - likely there is little interest in running OpenWrt on computers with lots of memory.

                  btw, OpenWrt is officially with that capitalization now, not OpenWRT, just for reference.

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                  • T
                    torontob
                    last edited by

                    I'm sorry, but this bit made me smile.  I initially attempted to set up my router-firewall-box as a SmoothWall box, because I'd had prior experience with SmoothWall.  When I went on their forums and asked about wireless support, I literally got laughed at.

                    You probably didn't really look or tested other opensource projects. There are few that do much better than pfSense in wireless department but again pfSense is my choice and I want it to better - no wait, be the BEST. It's important to compare feature by feature and not overall or other features when deciding at enhancements. Anyhow….minor details are not important.

                    Have you tried the Atheros AR5BXB92 with multiple AP and Infrastructure modes? Can you please post what is the maximum of each supported? By the way, is this the a/b/g/n card like this one:
                    http://www.ebay.ca/itm/Apple-Atheros-AR9280-AR5BXB92-802-11AGN-Mini-Pci-e-Wifi-300Mbp-dual-band-N-card-/250915087322?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item3a6bb463da#ht_3406wt_1185

                    Jimp: The card you were referring to is this one?:
                    http://www.ebay.ca/itm/Marvell-88W8363-Mini-PCI-Wireless-Card-300Mbps-802-11N-/230614780239?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item35b1b6494f#ht_2033wt_986

                    ^^^^ Seems like a Chinese replica if I am not wrong.

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                    • jimpJ
                      jimp Rebel Alliance Developer Netgate
                      last edited by

                      Yeah that's the card. Mine came on the slow boat from China but it did work. Looked like the two I got were system pulls, not "new" knock-offs.

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                      • T
                        torontob
                        last edited by

                        The cards listed here with same chip have an extra 2nd chip as well. What does that mean? Would that be a problem if I opt for one from Apple, Samsung, CyberTAN, or Buffalo. All show no drivers for Linux.

                        Thanks

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                        • jimpJ
                          jimp Rebel Alliance Developer Netgate
                          last edited by

                          Not sure really, I just grabbed two that had the 88W…. chip and they were both OK, though I don't have any in production.

                          Remember: Upvote with the 👍 button for any user/post you find to be helpful, informative, or deserving of recognition!

                          Need help fast? Netgate Global Support!

                          Do not Chat/PM for help!

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