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    APU set up with Wi-Fi

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Problems Installing or Upgrading pfSense Software
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    • E
      eiger3970
      last edited by

      Well, plugged APU in with SD card with img.gz, but can't plug my monitor's 15 pin male VGA cable into the APU serial port 9 pin male.

      Haven't found an adaptor yet, anyone know a solution to this?

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      • E
        eiger3970
        last edited by

        Ok, ordered a bunch of cables:
        Serial port 9 pin female to female adaptor.
        Serial port 9 pin male to VGA port 15 pin male.
        VGA port 15 pin female to female adaptor.

        Once arrived, hopefully my monitor will connect to the APU and see the cli to install pfSense from the SD card.

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        • JeGrJ
          JeGr LAYER 8 Moderator
          last edited by

          No no no. Stop! You are doing it wrong ;)

          The serial port is NOT an VGA port. Never ever. That is a console port. And to install pfsense on an APU, just search the forums for the APU topics already out there explaining what to do. To summarize:

          • you need to write the appropriate image to the SD card. as the APU has NO video out, you need a console-only nano-BSD version. I'd recommend the 4GB nanobsd image.
          • go to https://www.pfsense.org/download/mirror.php?section=downloads
          • select: 64bit, embedded, no vga / serial console (9-port SERIAL port), card size 4GB
          • download
          • to write the image to your sd card, use something like http://m0n0.ch/wall/physdiskwrite.php (the one with gui for example), watch out that you select the right target!
          • after the image is written correctly, put it into the apu
          • boot

          Another option would be to use a simple small usb stick and the live-boot image (amd64, live-cd with installer on usb memstick, serial!) and write that image to an usb stick with sth like http://sourceforge.net/projects/win32diskimager/

          What you need to actually see the output of your APU in case sth goes wrong is a "Serial Console cable". Do NOT put a VGA port with any kinds of adapters on that port, you may or may not damage your video port or the device!
          Read about that on https://doc.pfsense.org/index.php/Console_Types
          What you can use if you don't have a serial port on your PC or notebook is a USB to serial port adapter or cable. Like http://www.amazon.com/Manhattan-Serial-Converter-Connects-205146/dp/B0007OWNYA/

          Please don't "assume" things like console/VGA as that may simply damage your device. Read the forums ahead of ordering! :)

          Greets

          Don't forget to upvote 👍 those who kindly offered their time and brainpower to help you!

          If you're interested, I'm available to discuss details of German-speaking paid support (for companies) if needed.

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          • forbiddenlakeF
            forbiddenlake
            last edited by

            A serial to USB adapter is good, but you will also need a f2f NULL modem adapter such as this one.

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            • JeGrJ
              JeGr LAYER 8 Moderator
              last edited by

              @forbiddenlake: No you don't. What would you need that for? I'm using a USB/Serial Adapter for WRAP, ALIX and APUs all the time. There is no need for a gender changer whatsoever. If you need one, you have the wrong cable. All I need from time to time is a serial 9-port to RJ-45 adapter for those devices that use RJ-45 as easier (and smaller) ways to build console ports into their devices (such as cisco, lanner inc. devices, etc.).

              Greets

              Don't forget to upvote 👍 those who kindly offered their time and brainpower to help you!

              If you're interested, I'm available to discuss details of German-speaking paid support (for companies) if needed.

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

                Yes you do.
                Or at least every serial console I've ever used required a null modem cable. A USB to serial adapter, such as the one you linked to, gives you a male 9-pin serial port such as you would have found on the back of a PC 10 years ago. The console port on most hardware, including the APU, is also male. You need a cable that both changes the gender and cross connects the Tx and Rx lines; a null-modem cable.

                Steve

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                • forbiddenlakeF
                  forbiddenlake
                  last edited by

                  @JeGr yes you do, as stephenw wrote.  Also because I bought a f2f straight adapter and it didn't work, then I researched further, bought a f2f null modem adapter, and it worked.

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                  • JeGrJ
                    JeGr LAYER 8 Moderator
                    last edited by

                    @stephen: Or at least every serial console I've ever used required a null modem cable.
                    @forbiddenlage: yes you do

                    Guys please. I don't want to argue, but give me the benefit of the doubt. And read what I wrote:

                    What you need to actually see the output of your APU in case sth goes wrong is a "Serial Console cable".
                    -> That is per se known as null modem cable.

                    What you can use if you don't have a serial port on your PC or notebook is a USB to serial port adapter
                    -> That is the one you are arguing over, that it needs some converter/adapter.

                    Why? You take that stupid USB2Serial thing, plug it in, and take your console cable and plug it into the converter (that's what it is, a converter) and your board (WRAP, ALIX, APU, Lanner, whatever). So please give me the point that I know what I'm doing. I didn't mention any "strange" f2f or other adapters because the TS already seemed awfully confused over the nature of a console port in difference of a VGA port. And because me personally don't like any strange f2m/m2m/f2f adapters as they are - in most cases - calling for errors or strange happenings.

                    That's why I was suggesting going the classic route by using a standard 9port console/nullmodem cable and a usb2serial adapter.

                    Let's agree we all talk about the same and stop irritating the TS and other readers from this topic to buy any strange adapters or converters that perhaps won't function the way they want. OK? :D

                    Cheers

                    Don't forget to upvote 👍 those who kindly offered their time and brainpower to help you!

                    If you're interested, I'm available to discuss details of German-speaking paid support (for companies) if needed.

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

                      I agree we are talking the same thing.  :) We must be since all three of us have used a console cable and are aware of what's required.

                      Reading back through it I can see where the confusion started. Forbiddenlake said you need an adapter as well as a USB-Serial converter, which is true you do. You had already stated you need a console cable which is the same thing. However you then wrote 'no you don't' meaning you don't need the adapter as well as the console cable. I then misinterpreted that as you saying you don't need any sort of adapter.  ::)

                      Anyway just to be clear you need a null-modem cable also known as a console cable (the null-modem adapter is the same thing but shorter) and, if you don't have a serial port, you need a USB-serial converter.

                      Steve

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                      • JeGrJ
                        JeGr LAYER 8 Moderator
                        last edited by

                        Agreed :D

                        Don't forget to upvote 👍 those who kindly offered their time and brainpower to help you!

                        If you're interested, I'm available to discuss details of German-speaking paid support (for companies) if needed.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • E
                          eiger3970
                          last edited by

                          The Serial-USB and serial female-serial female cables arrived.
                          Micro SD 4GB card with the pfSense-2.1.2-RELEASE-4g-amd64-nanobsd-20140410-0542.img downloaded onto it,
                          I bought a 12V 1.5A power supply but no power to ALU?
                          Specs/tutorial for building the APU say a power supply of 1 - 2 Amps should be fine.

                          Plugged serial-USB cable into
                          serial female-serial-female to ALU serial male port and into
                          computer's USB port, but computer recognises no USB?

                          Ok, tested power supply using a multimeter.
                          Red cable plugged into VOhmmA
                          Black cable plugged into COM.
                          Yellow dial turned to 750 V AC.

                          Black cable pushed into the inside of the 2.5mm power supply connector (positive).
                          Red cable touching the outside of the 2.5mm power supply connector (negative).
                          Multimeter result: HV 026.

                          Red cable pushed into the inside of the 2.5mm power supply connector (positive).
                          Black cable touching the outside of the 2.5mm power supply connector (negative).
                          Multimeter result: HV 000.

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                          • stephenw10S
                            stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                            last edited by

                            Your power supply is almost certainly fine. To test the output with a multimeter you need to be on the correct range (if it's not auto-ranging). The '750V AC' setting is for measuring high voltage AC, such as the Volts at a wall socket. To measure the PSU, which is 12V DC, you need a low voltage DC setting. Typically that would be 20V DC or sometimes written 19V DC since the display can only read to 19.99V.
                            The output plug of the PSU is usually 'centre positive' so the red lead should go down the center of the connector.

                            Do you have links to the actual cables you bought?
                            If the computer is not detecting the USB cable then it can't work. What OS is running on the terminal computer?

                            Steve

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                            • E
                              eiger3970
                              last edited by

                              Thanks for the help.

                              Multimeter yellow dial set to 20V.

                              Black cable pushed into the inside of the 2.5mm power supply connector (positive).
                              Red cable touching the outside of the 2.5mm power supply connector (negative).
                              Multimeter result: 12.1.

                              Red cable pushed into the inside of the 2.5mm power supply connector (positive).
                              Black cable touching the outside of the 2.5mm power supply connector (negative).
                              Multimeter result: - 12.1.

                              Serial female to female cable.

                              Serial male to USB.

                              So yes, it seems the power supply is working.
                              No life at all on the APU?
                              Maybe the APU needs a trick like connecting an Ethernet cable or powering up and then putting the microSD card in the APU?

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                              • stephenw10S
                                stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                last edited by

                                Ok, check the leads at the multimeter end. The black lead is definitely in the COM connector and the red lead in the ' VOhmmA' connector?

                                Just as an aside here, I'm not sure how familiar with meters you are, do not put the red lead in the other connector, usually marked '10A', unless you know what you're doing. It's so very easy to kill powersupplies doing that!  ;)

                                If the leads are correct then it looks like your power supply is wired 'centre negative' which is incorrect:

                                @http://pcengines.ch/apu1c.htm:

                                12V DC, about 6 to 12W depending on CPU load. Jack = 2.5 mm, center positive

                                Maybe you typo'd the results? Where did you source the PSU?

                                Steve

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                                • E
                                  eiger3970
                                  last edited by

                                  So
                                  the power supply cable tip had the negative cable end with the 2.5mm metal positive.
                                  the power supply cable tip had the positive cable end with the 2.5mm metal negative.

                                  I changed
                                  the power supply cable tip with the negative end with the 2.5mm metal negative.
                                  The power supply cable tip with the positive end with the 2.5mm metal positive.

                                  Black cable pushed into the inside of the 2.5mm power supply connector (positive).
                                  Red cable touching the outside of the 2.5mm power supply connector (negative).
                                  Multimeter result: -12.13.

                                  Red cable pushed into the inside of the 2.5mm power supply connector (positive).
                                  Black cable touching the outside of the 2.5mm power supply connector (negative).
                                  Multimeter result: 12.13.

                                  The ALU now shows a green LED light on the MOBO D7, D10 and D11.

                                  The computer isn't showing any recognition of a USB connection.
                                  My OS is Linux Mint 16 Mate 64-bit.

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                                  • stephenw10S
                                    stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                    last edited by

                                    You'll have to check the logs in Mint to see what it made of the cable. It could be some obscure converter chip.

                                    Steve

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                                    • E
                                      eiger3970
                                      last edited by

                                      Ok, not sure how to find logs on Linux Mint 16.
                                      I went to /var/log, but nothing really re USBs?

                                      I'm wondering if the MicroSD card is causing the pfSense OS to somehow not load and 'awaken' the USB port?
                                      The MicroSD card has pfSense-2.1.2-RELEASE-4g-amd64-nanobsd-20140410-0542.img on it.
                                      I downloaded this file from pfSense download
                                        > Computer Architecture: AMD64 (64-bit) > Platform: Embedded (NanoBSD) typically with CF > Console: Serial > CF card size: 4GB.

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                                      • BBcan177B
                                        BBcan177 Moderator
                                        last edited by

                                        Logs are usually in the /var/log directory

                                        "Experience is something you don't get until just after you need it."

                                        Website: http://pfBlockerNG.com
                                        Twitter: @BBcan177  #pfBlockerNG
                                        Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/pfBlockerNG/new/

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                                        • BBcan177B
                                          BBcan177 Moderator
                                          last edited by

                                          USB logs should be in /var/log/messages

                                          You can run a tail -f /var/log/messages which is a live display of the log. Or use a cat or vi command to see the log

                                          "Experience is something you don't get until just after you need it."

                                          Website: http://pfBlockerNG.com
                                          Twitter: @BBcan177  #pfBlockerNG
                                          Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/pfBlockerNG/new/

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                                          • E
                                            eiger3970
                                            last edited by

                                            Thanks for the suggestions.

                                            /var/log has no directory or file names messages?

                                            Just these ones:

                                            
                                            /var/log $ ls
                                            alternatives.log       auth.log.4.gz  dpkg.log        kern.log.2.gz          pm-powersave.log.3.gz  teamviewer
                                            alternatives.log.1     boot.log       dpkg.log.1      kern.log.3.gz          pm-powersave.log.4.gz  udev
                                            alternatives.log.2.gz  bootstrap.log  dpkg.log.2.gz   kern.log.4.gz          pycentral.log          ufw.log
                                            alternatives.log.3.gz  btmp           dpkg.log.3.gz   lastlog                samba                  unattended-upgrades
                                            alternatives.log.4.gz  btmp.1         dpkg.log.4.gz   mail.err               speech-dispatcher      upstart
                                            alternatives.log.5.gz  ConsoleKit     dpkg.log.5.gz   mail.log               syslog                 vbox-install.log
                                            apt                    cups           faillog         mdm                    syslog.1               wtmp
                                            aptitude               dmesg          fontconfig.log  mintsystem.log         syslog.2.gz            wtmp.1
                                            aptitude.1.gz          dmesg.0        fsck            mintUpdate.history     syslog.3.gz            Xorg.0.log
                                            auth.log               dmesg.1.gz     hp              news                   syslog.4.gz            Xorg.0.log.old
                                            auth.log.1             dmesg.2.gz     installer       pm-powersave.log       syslog.5.gz            Xorg.20.log
                                            auth.log.2.gz          dmesg.3.gz     kern.log        pm-powersave.log.1     syslog.6.gz            Xorg.20.log.old
                                            auth.log.3.gz          dmesg.4.gz     kern.log.1      pm-powersave.log.2.gz  syslog.7.gz
                                            
                                            
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