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    BETA BLOWS, WANT TO DOWNGRADE ASAP

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved 2.1 Snapshot Feedback and Problems - RETIRED
    30 Posts 13 Posters 7.3k Views
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    • M
      mcrook
      last edited by

      I don't have physical access to the server, could this command be ran from the WEB GUI?

      Thank you for your help :)

      Best wishes,
      Matt

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • G
        gderf
        last edited by

        Go to /exec.php in the WebGUI, then enter the command there and execute it.

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        • W
          wallabybob
          last edited by

          @mcrook:

          I don't have physical access to the server

          SSH to pfSense from Linux/Unix system.
          Putty to pfSense from Windows.

          Or use Diagnostics -> Command Prompt in pFsense web GUI, type the command in the Command box and click on the Execute button (essentially what gderf suggested).

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          • M
            mcrook
            last edited by

            I used the Web UI and now the Web UI is frozen lol

            Guess putty would have been a better choice.

            lol

            Will keep you posted

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            • ?
              A Former User
              last edited by

              were running pfsense 2.1 Beta on our Network for MANY MANY months in our Multi-million dollar
              company. other than the brief time my boss was a moron and switched us to Cisco. that came
              back to bite him in the a** and has since been fired and right back to pfsense we went..

              we standardized on Supermicro Servers with Dual Port PCI-e Gig-E intel Nics.

              we have AT last count 60 of these pfsense servers in production in Colocation as well as Warehouses
              and our offices.

              at our warehouses/colo sites, we run at pretty close to 75% utilization of Gig-E bandwidth.

              Downtime???? what downtime? 0… nada... even on EARLY 2.1 Snapshots.... (other than the brief 2 month stint my boss
              did with Cisco but that wasnt a pfsense issue)

              we have a HUGE mix of VOIP and Data... and lots of servers spread out...

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              • C
                cmb
                last edited by

                @SunCatalyst:

                other than the brief time my boss was a moron and switched us to Cisco. that came
                back to bite him in the a** and has since been fired and right back to pfsense we went..

                So much for the old "nobody ever got fired for buying Cisco" mantra.  ;D

                What came back to bite you? Email response fine if you prefer not posting publicly (cmb at pfsense dot org), I'd like to know even if it's not something I can share.

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                • N
                  NOYB
                  last edited by

                  Oh right make public accusations but only share in private.

                  If not backed up in public.  It did not happen.  Or the cause was actually something else and blamed on Cisco.

                  I want to know too.

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                  • D
                    dhatz
                    last edited by

                    @NOYB:

                    Or the cause was actually something else and blamed on Cisco.

                    Cisco does have its strengths and weaknesses, but based on human nature I find it a bit hard to believe that a "multi-million dollar" company's IT manager would be fired for choosing "enterprise-grade" Cisco gear (unless the company has a very tech-savvy management that really understands the issues involved, which usually means that said company is itself in telecoms or IT).

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                    • ?
                      A Former User
                      last edited by

                      what we ran into when we switched to Cisco…

                      no unbound, no radius,  and other packages which we run on pfsense, plus UniFi controller
                      software for the Wireless Access Points in some of our offices, warehouses.
                      our Links were congested to start with at 75% link usage and it went to
                      almost 90%. (which in turn forced him to order another Gig-E drop to everywhere)

                      which in turn forced him to spend LOTS more money on servers to run services on, which
                      in turn took up more rack space, more man hours to deploy , time to send techs to every
                      place we have routers in. etc etc.

                      as far as Cisco hardware itself. Works great BUT the incured EXTRA costs every
                      month surely didnt help is ALREADY crazy amount of money he dropped on cisco
                      hardware... and then the servers. when he ordered the Cisco routers , he didnt order
                      ones rated at passing Multi Gig-e worth of traffic.. and that caused problems of its own..
                      (heard some of the purchases WERENT approved and he ordered this stuff anyways)

                      all in all , management was pissed we had some downtime during the what should
                      have been a 6 hour maint window per site to cut over (on different days according to when
                      our utilization was at the lowest) and in some cases it was BEYOND 24 hours....
                      (boss was shipping hardware that HADNT been config'd to places, and techs didnt realize
                      what happened until they tried to cut over) , CEO found out what was going on and
                      they called him in the office and it was game over... think it was the combined mess
                      that ultimately got him fired....

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                      • N
                        NOYB
                        last edited by

                        Sounds more like a planning, process, procedure, and MANAGEMENT issue to me.

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                        • stephenw10S
                          stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                          last edited by

                          Exactly. Switching significant parts of your network infrastructure is probably going to cause problems no matter what two things you're switching between. You can minimise those problems by careful planning and testing, something it sounds like this guy didn't do (or not carefully enough anyway).

                          Steve

                          Oh and this thread probably wouldn't be attracting nearly as much attention had it been titled:
                          BETA BLOWS ON MY HARDWARE, WANT TO DOWNGRADE ASAP

                          Or even better.

                          Beta is not working well on my hardware, is it possible to downgrade?  ;D

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • ?
                            A Former User
                            last edited by

                            Steve, he didnt listen to reason and test in the Lab before deploying…. EVERYONE in the dept is glad he is gone.
                            things have changed tremendously for the better after he was fired.

                            i could have fixed all the messes with the Cisco hardware . but was easier to cut back over to a system that works and pull the other hardware.
                            were currently looking at 10GE for places that need more than 1 Gig-E drop. 2 times Gig-E seems to be more expensive than 10GE.
                            and were looking at which 10GE adapters are supported and work well in FreeBSD and then order and Test extensively in the Lab.
                            all of our stuff is on Extensively tested Supermicro Xeon servers (2 different models) and have onboard intel nics. unfornately NOT 10GE.

                            back to the subject... Downgrade... just backup your config and reinstall... takes me all of about 10 minutes to
                            have a working system from the time the CD goes in the drive til i have a working config.

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                            • M
                              mcrook
                              last edited by

                              Here is the output finally from that command:

                              rl0: flags=8843 <up,broadcast,running,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                                      options=3808 <vlan_mtu,wol_ucast,wol_mcast,wol_magic>ether 00:04:e2:06:65:1d
                                      inet6 fe80::204:e2ff:fe06:651d%rl0 prefixlen 64 scopeid 0x7
                                      nd6 options=3 <performnud,accept_rtadv>media: Ethernet autoselect (100baseTX <full-duplex>)
                                      status: active
                              rl1: flags=8843 <up,broadcast,running,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                                      options=3808 <vlan_mtu,wol_ucast,wol_mcast,wol_magic>ether 00:04:e2:06:65:1d
                                      inet6 fe80::2e0:29ff:fe94:cb6a%rl1 prefixlen 64 scopeid 0x8
                                      nd6 options=3 <performnud,accept_rtadv>media: Ethernet autoselect (100baseTX <full-duplex>)
                                      status: active
                              re0: flags=8843 <up,broadcast,running,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                                      options=209b <rxcsum,txcsum,vlan_mtu,vlan_hwtagging,vlan_hwcsum,wol_magic>ether d8:5d:4c:d0:74:c9
                                      inet6 fe80::da5d:4cff:fed0:74c9%re0 prefixlen 64 scopeid 0x9
                                      inet 75.157.237.26 netmask 0xffffff00 broadcast 75.157.237.255
                                      nd6 options=1 <performnud>media: Ethernet autoselect (1000baseT <full-duplex>)
                                      status: active
                              re1: flags=8843 <up,broadcast,running,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                                      options=209b <rxcsum,txcsum,vlan_mtu,vlan_hwtagging,vlan_hwcsum,wol_magic>ether d8:5d:4c:d0:76:ad
                                      inet6 fe80::da5d:4cff:fed0:76ad%re1 prefixlen 64 scopeid 0xa
                                      nd6 options=1 <performnud>media: Ethernet autoselect (none)
                                      status: no carrier
                              fxp0: flags=8802 <broadcast,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                                      options=4219b <rxcsum,txcsum,vlan_mtu,vlan_hwtagging,vlan_hwcsum,tso4,wol_magic,vlan_hwtso>ether 00:07:e9:bc:61:42
                                      media: Ethernet autoselect (none)
                                      status: no carrier
                              enc0: flags=0<> metric 0 mtu 1536
                              pfsync0: flags=0<> metric 0 mtu 1460
                                      syncpeer: 224.0.0.240 maxupd: 128 syncok: 1
                              lo0: flags=8049 <up,loopback,running,multicast>metric 0 mtu 16384
                                      options=3 <rxcsum,txcsum>inet 127.0.0.1 netmask 0xff000000
                                      inet6 ::1 prefixlen 128
                                      inet6 fe80::1%lo0 prefixlen 64 scopeid 0xe
                                      nd6 options=3 <performnud,accept_rtadv>pflog0: flags=100 <promisc>metric 0 mtu 33200
                              lagg0: flags=8843 <up,broadcast,running,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                                      options=3808 <vlan_mtu,wol_ucast,wol_mcast,wol_magic>ether 00:04:e2:06:65:1d
                                      inet6 fe80::204:e2ff:fe06:651d%lagg0 prefixlen 64 scopeid 0x10
                                      inet 192.168.25.17 netmask 0xfffffc00 broadcast 192.168.27.255
                                      nd6 options=1 <performnud>media: Ethernet autoselect
                                      status: active
                                      laggproto lacp
                                      laggport: rl1 flags=1c <active,collecting,distributing>laggport: rl0 flags=1c <active,collecting,distributing>poes10: flags=8890 <pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                              poes11: flags=8890 <pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                              poes12: flags=8890 <pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                              poes13: flags=8890 <pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                              poes14: flags=8890 <pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                              poes15: flags=8890 <pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                              poes16: flags=8890 <pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                              poes17: flags=8890 <pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                              poes18: flags=8890 <pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                              poes19: flags=8890 <pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                              poes110: flags=8890 <pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                              poes111: flags=8890 <pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                              poes112: flags=8890 <pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                              poes113: flags=8890 <pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                              poes114: flags=8890 <pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                              poes115: flags=8890 <pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                              poes116: flags=8890 <pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500
                              poes117: flags=8890 <pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast>metric 0 mtu 1500

                              Thank you for your help!</pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast></pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast></pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast></pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast></pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast></pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast></pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast></pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast></pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast></pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast></pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast></pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast></pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast></pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast></pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast></pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast></pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast></pointopoint,noarp,simplex,multicast></active,collecting,distributing></active,collecting,distributing></performnud></vlan_mtu,wol_ucast,wol_mcast,wol_magic></up,broadcast,running,simplex,multicast></promisc></performnud,accept_rtadv></rxcsum,txcsum></up,loopback,running,multicast></rxcsum,txcsum,vlan_mtu,vlan_hwtagging,vlan_hwcsum,tso4,wol_magic,vlan_hwtso></broadcast,simplex,multicast></performnud></rxcsum,txcsum,vlan_mtu,vlan_hwtagging,vlan_hwcsum,wol_magic></up,broadcast,running,simplex,multicast></full-duplex></performnud></rxcsum,txcsum,vlan_mtu,vlan_hwtagging,vlan_hwcsum,wol_magic></up,broadcast,running,simplex,multicast></full-duplex></performnud,accept_rtadv></vlan_mtu,wol_ucast,wol_mcast,wol_magic></up,broadcast,running,simplex,multicast></full-duplex></performnud,accept_rtadv></vlan_mtu,wol_ucast,wol_mcast,wol_magic></up,broadcast,running,simplex,multicast>

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                              • M
                                mcrook
                                last edited by

                                BUMP

                                Any ideas?

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • stephenw10S
                                  stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                  last edited by

                                  Nothing jumps out. You are running quite a few PPPoE connections though, it's possible you are testing this further than other users.
                                  Unfortunately your ifconfig output is so long it has obscured the output of /etc/rc.banner. If you could run just that part and paste the output here that might show something.

                                  Steve

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                                  • C
                                    CuriousG
                                    last edited by

                                    @mcrook:

                                    BUMP

                                    Any ideas?

                                    I'm also using re* NICs and had a problem when going from 2.0RC3 to 2.0REL.  So for a long time I was running 2.0RC3.  I figure it would work itself out from a newer release.  Once 2.02REL came out I tried it again and I had the same issue where the WAN interface wouldn't work with DHCP.  What fixed it for me was manually setting the WAN interface to force 100BASET full duplex.  I'm not saying that's your problem since it appears you are getting an IP address (not sure if you're using static).  Wouldn't hurt to give it a try.

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