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    Proxy server question

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Problems Installing or Upgrading pfSense Software
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    • J
      Jamerson
      last edited by

      @KOM:

      i've ISCI Drive to the VM .

      ???  DO you mean SCSI or iSCSI?  In my lab with VMware Workstation, I added a SCSI disk and it appeared as /dev/da1.

      yes i meant the SCSI disk separate than the VM Disk, and is Thick Provision
      after i updated to 2.2 i beleive it starts showing up the attached disks

      df -h still doesn't shows the attached hdd
      what i am doing wrong

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      • KOMK
        KOM
        last edited by

        df -h still doesn't shows the attached hdd
        what i am doing wrong

        I think df only shows mounted filesystems.  Did you partition, format & mount your disk using the directions in the links I posted?

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        • J
          Jamerson
          last edited by

          @KOM:

          df -h still doesn't shows the attached hdd
          what i am doing wrong

          I think df only shows mounted filesystems.  Did you partition, format & mount your disk using the directions in the links I posted?

          i am stuck at the first step when i run the command /var/run/dmesg.boot its said /var/run/dmesg.boot:not found
          i already added to the disk

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          • KOMK
            KOM
            last edited by

            dmseg.boot is a log file.  You don't run it; you view it with cat or a text editor.

            OK, firs things first.  What output do you get when you run the command:

            ls /dev/da*

            We need to see if pfSense even sees your disk at all.  You are specifically looking for /dev/da1.

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            • J
              Jamerson
              last edited by

              @KOM:

              dmseg.boot is a log file.  You don't run it; you view it with cat or a text editor.

              OK, firs things first.  What output do you get when you run the command:

              ls /dev/da*

              We need to see if pfSense even sees your disk at all.  You are specifically looking for /dev/da1.

              this what i get .

              [2.2-RELEASE][root@firewall.pfsense.lan]/root: ls /dev/da*
              /dev/da0    /dev/da0s1  /dev/da0s1a /dev/da0s1b /dev/da1
              
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              • KOMK
                KOM
                last edited by

                Ok, so it sees your disk.  I'm not sure what your problem is then.  Just partition, format and mount it as per the guide I linked to:

                # gpart create -s GPT da1
                # gpart add -t freebsd-ufs da1
                # newfs -U /dev/da1s1
                # mkdir /newdisk
                # mount /dev/da1s1 /newdisk
                

                Add this to /etc/fstab so that it mounts at boot:

                /dev/da1s1	/newdisk	ufs	rw	2	2
                
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                • J
                  Jamerson
                  last edited by

                  @KOM:

                  Ok, so it sees your disk.  I'm not sure what your problem is then.  Just partition, format and mount it as per the guide I linked to:

                  # gpart create -s GPT da1
                  # gpart add -t freebsd-ufs da1
                  # newfs -U /dev/da1s1
                  # mkdir /newdisk
                  # mount /dev/da1s1 /newdisk
                  

                  Add this to /etc/fstab so that it mounts at boot:

                  /dev/da1s1	/newdisk	ufs	rw	2	2
                  

                  Thank you KOM
                  the problem is when i run the command

                  newfs -U /dev/da1s1

                  it said command not found !

                  [2.2-RELEASE][root@firewall.pfsense.lan]/root: # newfs -U /dev/da1s1
                  #: Command not found.
                  [2.2-RELEASE][root@firewall.pfsense.lan]/root:

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                  • KOMK
                    KOM
                    last edited by

                    #: Command not found.

                    The # character is meant to represent your shell prompt.  You don't actually type that part.  No wonder you've been having trouble.

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                    • J
                      Jamerson
                      last edited by

                      @KOM:

                      #: Command not found.

                      The # character is meant to represent your shell prompt.  You don't actually type that part.  No wonder you've been having trouble.

                      sorry mommy mistake
                      does the commands that has /dev/da1s1 means  /dev/da1 for me right ?
                      i believe dev/da1 is my current install pfsense and dev/da1pl1 is the attached disk ?

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                      • KOMK
                        KOM
                        last edited by

                        I did explain earlier that when they reference /dev/ada1, you would use/dev/da1.  When they use /dev/ada1p1, you would use /dev/da1s1.  p means partition, s means slice, but they are basically the same.

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                        • J
                          Jamerson
                          last edited by

                          @KOM:

                          I did explain earlier that when they reference /dev/ada1, you would use/dev/da1.  When they use /dev/ada1p1, you would use /dev/da1s1.  p means partition, s means slice, but they are basically the same.

                          is exactly what i am doing
                          [2.2-RELEASE][root@firewall.pfsense.lan]/root: newfs -U /dev/da1s1
                          newfs: /dev/da1s1: could not find special device
                          [2.2-RELEASE][root@firewall.pfsense.lan]/root:

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                          • K
                            kejianshi
                            last edited by

                            I lost track.  Are you still trying to figure out how to cache dynamic content?  Don't waste too much time.  OK?

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • KOMK
                              KOM
                              last edited by

                              newfs: /dev/da1s1: could not find special device

                              OK, this one's on me.  When using gpart, it will make a partition, not a slice.  Try:

                              newfs -U /dev/da1p1
                              mkdir /newdisk
                              mount /dev/da1p1 /newdisk
                              

                              I lost track.  Are you still trying to figure out how to cache dynamic content?

                              We're still going over Unix disk basics at this point.

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                              • K
                                kejianshi
                                last edited by

                                Yeah - Its a nice mental exercise and is good to know (-:

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • J
                                  Jamerson
                                  last edited by

                                  @KOM:

                                  newfs: /dev/da1s1: could not find special device

                                  OK, this one's on me.  When using gpart, it will make a partition, not a slice.  Try:

                                  newfs -U /dev/da1p1
                                  mkdir /newdisk
                                  mount /dev/da1p1 /newdisk
                                  

                                  I lost track.  Are you still trying to figure out how to cache dynamic content?

                                  We're still going over Unix disk basics at this point.

                                  Thank you so much for this KOM,
                                  the Disk is mapped now going to configured it for the cache
                                  Mucht appreciate really and your patients as well

                                  when i try to navigate to the new mounted disk i get "access denied "
                                  trying to create a folder for the cashing.

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                                  • KOMK
                                    KOM
                                    last edited by

                                    You probably have to give the proxy user ownership of the folder:

                                    chown proxy:proxy /your_disk_mount_point
                                    
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                                    • J
                                      Jamerson
                                      last edited by

                                      @KOM:

                                      You probably have to give the proxy user ownership of the folder:

                                      chown proxy:proxy /your_disk_mount_point
                                      

                                      KOM you are the man,
                                      thank you

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