Installation/ Wan-Lan setup
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To be fair, I've seen the last bit of the start sequence lag noticeably if there's nothing plugged in the WAN port on some installs. Perhaps up to 45s total, but it sure feels like 15min when you're used to a normal 10s start ;)
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Having nothing plugged to WAN port is a non-standard usage scenario. You can't expect the system to behave normally under such conditions.
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Hey I can expect anything I want to!
It's just not reasonable to do so ;)
I fully agree with you for an operational box, you need something on all the ports you're using, but when setting up with new/odd hardware I've often just set it on the bench and load the software to see how far I can get before something dies. If I get a console, then I'll hook up network connections to see how various cards respond.
The time lag I noticed is more an indication of how well pfsense performs when you set it up right than a criticism of it's handling of boundary cases.
I wouldn't use anything else if I have a choice…....
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Figured out what my problem was. With 4GB Ram installed the 64 bit version does not install. Used the
32 bit version and all went fine. The Info on plugged in WAN Port and the Realtek NIC helps me to the next step.
I will give 2.2 alpfa a try after I get this setup going. Appreciate not to have to hunt for a solution to the Realtek NIC.
Paul :) -
With 4GB Ram installed the 64 bit version does not install.
Interesting. That should not be the case, there's no minimum RAM with 64bit. At least it's not different to 32bit (256MB).
Steve
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With 4GB Ram installed the 64 bit version does not install.
Interesting. That should not be the case, there's no minimum RAM with 64bit. At least it's not different to 32bit (256MB).
Steve
There are known problems with some BIOSes on certain motherboards when using a 64-bit OS and 4GBs or more of RAM. A BIOS update should solve the problem if one is available.
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Right, but not by the time you get to the interface detection? I would expect it to hang or panic at the bootloader, unable to load the kernel, or in the BIOS itself. Of course I'm all ears if you know something different.
Maybe a 64bit driver issue? :-\Steve
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A couple of hours ago I was happy, got all the way to writing the hard disk. However I could not
access the GUI via 192.168.1.1. Also it shut itself down and booted up again and again.
So I start over thinking I messed up somewhere. Now I get a mount error notice. Do not
know were to go from here.Paul :(
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Hmm, repeatedly rebooting sounds more like a hardware problem. Do you know the history of the board/RAM/harddrive? I think I would be running a few cycles through memtest86+ just to verify the board and RAM. That might also explain the 32/64bit difference you had.
Steve
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I'm with Steve on a possible hardware issue.
As well as the memtest, I'd suggest a burnin routine. The UBCD (Ultimate Boot CD, Google should easily find it) has some good all in one tools that are helpful in these scenarios.
No point in using pfsense as your trusted firewall if you can't trust the hardware it runs on.