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    Using a hard-disk in a Watchguard Firebox X750e for cache/log storage

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    • stephenw10S
      stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
      last edited by

      Pretty sure the CF slot is always master if a CF card is in it so I would think it's dev0.

      On my test box here which I haven't set loader.conf.local on it will boot if I use:

      Hit [Enter] to boot immediately, or any other key for command prompt.
      Booting [/boot/kernel/kernel] in 4 seconds...
      
      Type '?' for a list of commands, 'help' for more detailed help.
      OK set hint.ata.0.dev0.mode=PIO4
      OK boot
      Booting...
      
      

      So I'd say you're good with that.

      Steve

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      • S
        Steve Evans
        last edited by

        Thank you sir, you're a scholar and a gentleman!  :)

        Your suggestion works a treat. I clearly had a bit of a mental block on what "devX" could be. I'd tried "0", but it hadn't occurred to me to used "dev0".  :-[ I'm clearly not familiar enough with FreeBSD naming conventions.

        [code]ada0 at ata0 bus 0 scbus0 target 0 lun 0
        ada0: <sandisk sdcfh-004g="" hdx="" 6.02="">CFA-0 device
        ada0: Serial Number ABZ042211193008
        ada0: 16.700MB/s transfers (PIO4, PIO 512bytes)
        ada0: 3815MB (7813120 512 byte sectors: 16H 63S/T 7751C)
        ada0: Previously was known as ad0
        ada1 at ata0 bus 0 scbus0 target 1 lun 0
        ada1: <st9402115a 3.01="">ATA-6 device
        ada1: Serial Number 5PV09ZED
        ada1: 100.000MB/s transfers (UDMA5, PIO 8192bytes)
        ada1: 38154MB (78140160 512 byte sectors: 16H 63S/T 16383C)
        ada1: Previously was known as ad1

        I'm now getting the performance I need for my disk used for logs and caching.

        diskinfo -tv /dev/ad1
        /dev/ad1
                512             # sectorsize
                40007761920     # mediasize in bytes (37G)
                78140160        # mediasize in sectors
                0               # stripesize
                0               # stripeoffset
                77520           # Cylinders according to firmware.
                16              # Heads according to firmware.
                63              # Sectors according to firmware.
                5PV09ZED        # Disk ident.
        
        Seek times:
                Full stroke:      250 iter in   7.926598 sec =   31.706 msec
                Half stroke:      250 iter in   6.203416 sec =   24.814 msec
                Quarter stroke:   500 iter in   9.877891 sec =   19.756 msec
                Short forward:    400 iter in   3.476113 sec =    8.690 msec
                Short backward:   400 iter in   2.381591 sec =    5.954 msec
                Seq outer:       2048 iter in   0.197696 sec =    0.097 msec
                Seq inner:       2048 iter in   0.179296 sec =    0.088 msec
        Transfer rates:
                outside:       102400 kbytes in   3.135350 sec =    32660 kbytes/sec
                middle:        102400 kbytes in   3.745807 sec =    27337 kbytes/sec
                inside:        102400 kbytes in   5.382397 sec =    19025 kbytes/sec
        
        

        Steve</st9402115a></sandisk>

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        • stephenw10S
          stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
          last edited by

          Nice! I'm going to have to try that sometime.  :)

          Steve

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          • stephenw10S
            stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
            last edited by

            In testing the HD issue I ran that benchmark. Thought my result might ammuse you:

            [2.2-RELEASE][root@pfSense.localdomain]/root: diskinfo -tv /dev/ada0
            /dev/ada0
                    512             # sectorsize
                    20003880960     # mediasize in bytes (19G)
                    39070080        # mediasize in sectors
                    0               # stripesize
                    0               # stripeoffset
                    38760           # Cylinders according to firmware.
                    16              # Heads according to firmware.
                    63              # Sectors according to firmware.
                    32K60131T       # Disk ident.
            
            Seek times:
                    Full stroke:      250 iter in  11.840086 sec =   47.360 msec
                    Half stroke:      250 iter in   8.878876 sec =   35.516 msec
                    Quarter stroke:   500 iter in  15.334866 sec =   30.670 msec
                    Short forward:    400 iter in   8.639504 sec =   21.599 msec
                    Short backward:   400 iter in   7.131472 sec =   17.829 msec
                    Seq outer:       2048 iter in   0.282496 sec =    0.138 msec
                    Seq inner:       2048 iter in   1.086055 sec =    0.530 msec
            Transfer rates:
                    outside:       102400 kbytes in  23.521335 sec =     4353 kbytes/sec
                    middle:        102400 kbytes in  20.436978 sec =     5011 kbytes/sec
                    inside:        102400 kbytes in  48.862760 sec =     2096 kbytes/sec
            
            

            Something not right.  ::) Yet:

            [2.2-RELEASE][root@pfSense.localdomain]/root: dmesg | grep ada
            ada0 at ata0 bus 0 scbus0 target 0 lun 0
            ada0: <toshiba mk2018gap="" m1.42="" a="">ATA-5 device
            ada0: Serial Number 32K60131T
            ada0: 100.000MB/s transfers (UDMA5, PIO 8192bytes)
            ada0: 19077MB (39070080 512 byte sectors: 16H 63S/T 16383C)
            ada0: Previously was known as ad0
            Trying to mount root from ufs:/dev/ada0s1a [rw]...</toshiba> 
            

            Just a knackered old drive? Works fine though, as long as you're not in a hurry!

            Steve

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            • S
              Steve Evans
              last edited by

              Ouch. Not much use as a cache though as it's no faster than fiber broadband!

              Steve

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              • M
                MacUsers
                last edited by

                @stephenw10:

                [2.2-RELEASE][root@pfSense.localdomain]/root: dmesg | grep ada
                ada0 at ata0 bus 0 scbus0 target 0 lun 0
                ada0: <toshiba mk2018gap="" m1.42="" a="">ATA-5 device
                ada0: Serial Number 32K60131T
                ada0: 100.000MB/s transfers (UDMA5, PIO 8192bytes)
                ada0: 19077MB (39070080 512 byte sectors: 16H 63S/T 16383C)
                ada0: Previously was known as ad0
                Trying to mount root from ufs:/dev/ada0s1a [rw]...</toshiba> 
                

                I was just looking in some old posts - Does it mean you have TRIM enabled on your TOSHIBA MK2018GAP drive?

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                • stephenw10S
                  stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                  last edited by

                  No. I'm pretty sure that device is way too old to support TRIM
                  TRIM only applies to SSDs anyway.

                  Steve

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                  • M
                    MacUsers
                    last edited by

                    That's what I knew as well but this line in your dmesg:

                    ada0: 100.000MB/s transfers (UDMA5, PIO 8192bytes)

                    made me think otherwise.

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                    • stephenw10S
                      stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                      last edited by

                      What part of that implies TRIM?
                      That's the maximum speed on the interface, which is far, far faster than the drive can manage in this case.  ;)

                      Steve

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                      • M
                        MacUsers
                        last edited by

                        Nothing in particular, to be honest. I see Ultra ATA/33 on my x750e as opposed to ATA/100 on yours:

                        [2.2.2-RELEASE][root@wg550.home]/root: dmesg|grep ada1
                        ada1 at ata0 bus 0 scbus0 target 1 lun 0
                        ada1: <toshiba mk4026gax="" pa102d=""> ATA-6 device
                        ada1: Serial Number 65IF3453T
                        ada1: 33.300MB/s transfers (UDMA2, PIO 8192bytes)
                        ada1: 38154MB (78140160 512 byte sectors: 16H 63S/T 16383C)
                        ada1: Previously was known as ad1</toshiba>
                        

                        It says ATA-6 device, so I was hoping to see UDMA5 in the next line but UDMA2 is the ATA-4, IIRC. I'm out of sys-admin business for while now, so may be talking rubbish as well.  ;)

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                        • M
                          MacUsers
                          last edited by

                          On a separate note, a really silly question (maybe): Is it worth putting a SSD in in WatchGuard/pfSense? Apart from speedy-boot, what added benefit over an PATA drive?

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                          • ?
                            Guest
                            last edited by

                            @MacUsers:

                            On a separate note, a really silly question (maybe): Is it worth putting a SSD in in WatchGuard/pfSense? Apart from speedy-boot, what added benefit over an PATA drive?

                            There are many IDE SSDs out to install inside and I really would go more with a SSD
                            rather then a IDE HDD because of less power, faster and not so hot.

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                            • stephenw10S
                              stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                              last edited by

                              They are massively faster so if you're using it as a squid cache it will help a lot. Someone recently posted some numbers from one in the main Xe thread.

                              https://forum.pfsense.org/index.php?topic=20095.msg501388#msg501388

                              Steve

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                              • N
                                NozeDive
                                last edited by

                                Steve,

                                I know this is a really old post, but I'm hoping you were subscribed to it, and that this post reaches you.

                                I was hoping that you could go in to some more detail on the /etc/rc.embedded section of your post.

                                I followed your steps, modifying the device names to match my own set-up (i.e. using /dev/ada1s1a instead of /dev/ad1s1a) except I missed this in a few places. The end result was a system that would not boot correctly, and a file system that could not be re-mounted as read/write, so I ended up having to nuke the CF card and starting over.

                                That was totally my fault, but I'd like to try it again, which is why I'm hoping that you could go into a little more detail about what each section of the script in /etc/rc.embedded does.

                                In any case, I may end up using a spare 8GB USB flash drive rather than this 250GB SATA spinning rust drive i'm trying to use since that seems like overkill, but I'd really like to get this set-up to work too for academic reasons.

                                Again, I know this is an old topic, so if this does reach you, thanks for revisiting this post.

                                »Tony

                                (BTW I'm using a WatchGuard Firebox XTM 515)

                                Best Regards,

                                Tony Scardina

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • S
                                  Steve Evans
                                  last edited by

                                  @NozeDive:

                                  Steve,

                                  I know this is a really old post, but I'm hoping you were subscribed to it, and that this post reaches you.

                                  I was hoping that you could go in to some more detail on the /etc/rc.embedded section of your post.

                                  I followed your steps, modifying the device names to match my own set-up (i.e. using /dev/ada1s1a instead of /dev/ad1s1a) except I missed this in a few places. The end result was a system that would not boot correctly, and a file system that could not be re-mounted as read/write, so I ended up having to nuke the CF card and starting over.

                                  That was totally my fault, but I'd like to try it again, which is why I'm hoping that you could go into a little more detail about what each section of the script in /etc/rc.embedded does.

                                  In any case, I may end up using a spare 8GB USB flash drive rather than this 250GB SATA spinning rust drive i'm trying to use since that seems like overkill, but I'd really like to get this set-up to work too for academic reasons.

                                  Again, I know this is an old topic, so if this does reach you, thanks for revisiting this post.

                                  »Tony

                                  (BTW I'm using a WatchGuard Firebox XTM 515)

                                  Hi Tony,

                                  The code section of interest is below:

                                  # If a hard disk is installed then mount that on /var
                                  # otherwise use a ramdisk
                                  harddisk="/dev/ad1s1a"
                                  if [ -c $harddisk ]
                                  then
                                  
                                  

                                  This checks that /dev/ad1s1a exists as a character device.

                                  
                                          echo -n "Using /var physical disk..."
                                          mount -o noatime $harddisk /var
                                  
                                  

                                  This mounts the partition (in this case partition 'a') on /var.

                                  
                                          # Ensure /var/run is removed on boot before daemons are started
                                          # It should arguably be a tmpfs, but this works fine
                                          rm -r /var/run
                                  
                                  

                                  Remove the /var/run directory as nanobsd expects this to not persist across reboots, and whilst that would be true for a RAM disk, the rotating rust remembers.

                                  
                                          # sshd won't start if /var/empty exists on boot
                                          rm -r /var/empty
                                  
                                  

                                  Similarly remove /var/empty.

                                  
                                  else
                                  
                                  

                                  The following is the original code which creates a RAM disk for /var..

                                          echo -n "Using /var memory disk..."
                                          mdmfs -S -M -s ${varsize} md /var
                                  
                                          # Create some needed directories
                                          /bin/mkdir -p /var/db
                                  
                                          # Ensure vi's recover directory is present
                                          /bin/mkdir -p /var/tmp/vi.recover/
                                  fi
                                  

                                  Steve

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                                  • N
                                    NozeDive
                                    last edited by

                                    :)

                                    Steve!

                                    Thank you very much for taking the time to reply! I'm not sure how I missed your reply (I must have my email settings wrong) but I didn't  see it until just now, and I wanted to make sure I thanked you for replying!

                                    I did end up going with the 8GB thumb drive, FYI, but I used basically this same method to get it to work, and it's working well.

                                    Thanks again!

                                    –Tony

                                    Best Regards,

                                    Tony Scardina

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • L
                                      Love.IT.Again
                                      last edited by

                                      I just installed a 120GB IDE HDD (Samsung) in my X1250e.  It is currently running fine without the SD card.  My problem now is how to fit the HDD inside?  I can't find any tiny rails to use.  Any suggestions and tips will be much appreciated.  I am also planning to upgrade the memory which is currently 256MB.  What's the maximum memory capacity can I install?  Thanks a lot.

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                                      • ?
                                        Guest
                                        last edited by

                                        @Love.IT.Again

                                        I just installed a 120GB IDE HDD (Samsung) in my X1250e.

                                        If you want to use Squid as a caching proxy I suggest you to go with a IDE SSD drive that is
                                        speeding up much and many things. Something like a "OWC Mercury Legacy Pro 120 GB SSD"
                                        You will need an adapter from 3,5" to 2,5" for this, in the original version of the X1250e such
                                        an adapter was selld together with this box. So you might be able with ease and for cheap one
                                        of them over the Internet. (See the linked tutorial PDF document at the end of this post)

                                        My problem now is how to fit the HDD inside?  I can't find any tiny rails to use.  Any suggestions and tips will be much appreciated.

                                        I was only found one Blog where they talk about, if not really helpful please open or download
                                        the Watchguard pfSense guide from the end of this post there is a caddy shown inside and
                                        how to mount him into the X1250e series box.

                                        I am also planning to upgrade the memory which is currently 256MB.
                                        What's the maximum memory capacity can I install?  Thanks a lot.

                                        DDR2 533MHz 2GB modul, greater single modules of this ram are not on the market
                                        able to get so I assume this might be than also the maximum in a single RAM module system.

                                        A last if VPN becomes a really urgent part of your pfSense you could install or insert a Soekris vpn1411
                                        miniPCI card that is supported under pfSense. Link

                                        Watchguard pfSense guide

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                                        • L
                                          Love.IT.Again
                                          last edited by

                                          @BlueKobold

                                          Thanks a lot for the very informative reply.  I really appreciate it a lot.

                                          For the meantime, I will stick at my present hardware configuration while I try to learn PFSense.
                                          Upgrading to SSD is part of my plan, but with the high price of IDE SSD, makes me think of buying a faster machine instead.

                                          At the moment, the IDE HDD is mounted with a home made rail from a SPAM can.  Making a better/nicer hdd caddy will be my next project.

                                          Thanks again.

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                                          • _
                                            _ToXIc_
                                            last edited by

                                            hi this is exactly what i'm looking for..

                                            got all the steps but i got lost at the following.. not sure exactly what to do

                                            @Steve:

                                            Then modify /etc/rc.embedded to conditionally replace the mounting of the /var ramdisk thus:

                                            echo -n "Setting up memory disks..."
                                            mdmfs -S -M -s ${tmpsize} md /tmp
                                            
                                            # If a hard disk is installed then mount that on /var
                                            # otherwise use a ramdisk
                                            harddisk="/dev/ad1s1a"
                                            if [ -c $harddisk ]
                                            then
                                                    echo -n "Using /var physical disk..."
                                                    mount $harddisk /var
                                            
                                                    # Ensure /var/run is removed on boot before daemons are started
                                                    # It should arguably be a tmpfs, but this works fine
                                                    rm -r /var/run
                                            
                                                    # sshd won't start if /var/empty exists on boot
                                                    rm -r /var/empty
                                            else
                                                    echo -n "Using /var memory disk..."
                                                    mdmfs -S -M -s ${varsize} md /var
                                            
                                                    # Create some needed directories
                                                    /bin/mkdir -p /var/db
                                            
                                                    # Ensure vi's recover directory is present
                                                    /bin/mkdir -p /var/tmp/vi.recover/
                                            fi
                                            
                                            echo " done."
                                            

                                            Steve

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