PfSense on Firebox X550e: A few questions
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No idea I'm afraid. You'll have to connect to both sides of the switch though. I don't know if the spade terminals on the back of the IEC AC inlet can be pushed into the connector on the picopsu cable directly, seems like they might. I would think you'll juts have to offer it up and see.
Steve
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I sent a message to the company that makes the PSU on the offhand they answer me :P . I will continue to search; however, I want to preserve the modular connections. Thank for the input.
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I want to change the CPU, but it seems I cannot find a Pentium M LV cpu. Where did others get their LV CPU to put into their Firebox? I am jealous :'( …
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I'm using standard voltage CPUs. I believe everyone else it also. I've only once seen a socketed LV Pentium-M and never seen a socketed ULV. To be fair it was claimed to be an LV model by the seller but I never actually saw it! ;)
Although the wikipedia page lists all models as being available socketed I'm unsure.Steve
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I received information from Mini-Box regarding the PicoPSU, they provided a wiring diagram of the connection type they use (not the specific one for the PSU, but good enough). After some research and phone calls, I believe I found the parts to be able to connect into an on/off switch. The connector type is known as a Molex Mini-Fit Jr 4 circuit (circuit IMHO is misleading, it really means the # of pins). The Molex part numbers are:
Female housing 39-01-2040
Female terminals (22AWG) 39-00-0039Male housing 39-01-2041
Male terminals (22AWG) 39-00-0041I will be ordering some soon; just need to find an on-line distributor with reasonable prices. Hope this helps others if they want to build in an on/off switch.
As for the CPU; currently it is running 350C with no load using x80 fan speed. I need to run the tests to see what temp will be with the CPU running at peak load.
I would love to get a LV socket-ed CPU, but I just do not know where to find one :-\
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Yep, I'd love to try one of those 10W 778s for example. Though I have no idea if the firebox would recognise it correctly.
CPU-world lists it a BGA only.Steve
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Okay, I think I just got difference between PGA and BGA. The BGA CPUs are ones that do not have the pins whereas the PGA have the pins on them. I know it seems obvious; just never really thought about it before. That is the reason I could not find what I was looking for :-[ . I am clued back into the real world - for a short time at least…
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I am an unhappy camper :-[
I got everything situated and tried to cut over from my $40 dlink to the X550e. I did a release IP address on the dlink, switched the cables and big let down. It seems the WAN keeps going up/down up/down as seen in the demsg output. I switched the WAN from SK3 to SK1 to SK2 all the same problem. It gets the ip address from my ISP then drops it is an endless cycle.
Here are a few things I noticed:
[list]- CPU is 100% running check_reload_status at near 90%
- I see this in the syslog
The command '/sbin/dhclient -c /var/etc/dhclient_wan.conf sk1 > /tmp/sk1_output 2> /tmp/sk1_error_output' returned exit code '15', the output was '' The command '/sbin/ifconfig 'sk1' inet delete' returned exit code '1', the output was 'ifconfig: ioctl (SIOCDIFADDR): Can't assign requested address'
- the port just keeps cycling up/down like a yo-yo
The only thing I found is information related to MSK drivers, but mine or SK. I will do more reading, but if anyone has info that would be great.
Thx …
EDIT:
I tested the X550e trying to get an ip address using my own Linux DHCP server and that had the same issue. The WAN interface behaved the same :-[. I would think this eliminates the an incompatibility between the hardware. X550e to Ubee for ISP and X550e to D-Link switch (16x1GB). If I use static addresses it works fan (could test it with ISP 'cause that is not how it works). -
There have been some fixes gone in for things like that since 2.1 was released. The easiest thing is to try one of the 2.1.1 snapshots which have the fixes in place.
https://forum.pfsense.org/index.php/topic,71546.0/topicseen.htmlSteve
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Hi - I am on-line and using my pfSense X550e. The 2.2.1 release worked like a charm, and as a bonus feature the LED nic lights work; guess Stephen's patch made into the new release. Thanks for all your help. I am almost finished with this project, just need to build the on off switch and attach the barrel adapter for my picoPSU to where the other plug was. Think I will use some plexi-glass and screws, if not I will figure something else out.
Next project - finish building my server rack - got all the word cut and now I have to assemble them with the metal uprights.
dwfa
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I would be amazed if my led patch had made it into anything. It was a hideous bodge! ::)
Very interesting that you say the LEDs have started behaving I wonder if a newer sk driver has made it in. Time to check the source…Steve
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Building the on/off switch.
I received my mini-fit jr plugs they fit :-). This might be a simple question; does it matter the rocker switch that I get as long as it it rated for the same AMPS and voltage? As well does it matter if it is DC or AC rated? I would think it is does matter; but I am no expert.
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Switches usually have a rating for both AC and DC current. The DC rating is almost always lower because it's harder to break dc current and it damages the contacts more. The voltage rating of any switch is probably higher than the 12V you're switching but the current might be an issue in the small format on the existing switch.
The original switch:
http://www.rongfeng.com.tw/pdf/RF-1003.pdf
Doesn't seem to have an explicitly indicated DC rating. The '(4)' rating could be for an inductive load. At 12V DC you should be good for the 3-4A the box might draw.Steve
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Thanks for the info. I think I understand what you are writing. hmmmm - from what you are writing I gather the switch might not work due to "hard to break the dc current". Did I understand you correctly?
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That was basically what I was saying although having just read up on it (I should know this stuff but have forgotten) I think an identical switch would be fine. Although it's true that DC current is far harder to break than AC the low voltage tends to cancel that out. Some light reading. If you were using 125V DC then the switch would be toast! Even so you would find if you looked that the switch contact sustain far more damage due to arcing with DC current. How often do you plan on switching it on or off anyway?
Steve
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I don't really plan on doing turning it on/off all that much. It was more for convenience. I think I need to re-evaluate :P the on/off switch thingy.
However, I would still like to mount the dc barrel to the back of the unit where the old plug was; unless you advise against it for safety reasons. Was thinking of plexi-glass with a hole, but I could be swayed to just leave the adapter cord running through the opening and keep it protected like it is now.
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Plexiglass with a hole would be nice. Almost anything with a hole (aluminium, plastic, card even) would be fine. I take it you don't want to drill a hole in the case? My PSU is hardwired which is not a nice solution but it gets disconnected so infrequently it's not an issue.
Steve
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I could drill a new hole, but I would rather just fill up on of the existing ones - but thanks for the thoughts.