Apple users does not get the popup
-
Hi,
I configured a Captive Portal on pfSense 2.2.4 and users are able to surf the web authenticating themselves through the Captive Portal.
But Apple users are not getting the popup when they connect to the Wi-Fi network.
Connecting to http://www.apple.com/library/test/success.html redirects to the Captive Portal.
I searched for some solutions but I didn't solve my problem.
Could you help me please?
Thank you very much!
Bye -
From the sound of it you need to check the security settings on your Mac users' browsers. They might be blocking pop-ups.
-
Whatever is happening it is completely up to the client.
In my experience Apple devices are pretty reliable in automatically checking for access and bringing up a mini browser on the portal page.
-
I've had tons of problem with Apple devices not liking the CP. Most of this has to do with the redirect to the CP as far as i've been able to understand. Lots of older iOS versions are very protective and don't like the methods of the redirects as they seem to view them as a malicious action. I usually pass the MAC of most of these devices and they function well. iOS 9.0 devices seem to be doing better than their predecessors as far as i've noticed. iPhones seems to have problems about 5-10% of the time and iPad around 20%. Usually this is pop-up blockers and the Safari browser in general. If they use Chrome (or Firefox now thank God) they seem to get the portal page to open without errors. Like most of the previous posters have stated, this is 99% of the time a client problem.
-
I've had tons of problem with Apple devices not liking the CP. Most of this has to do with the redirect to the CP as far as i've been able to understand. Lots of older iOS versions are very protective and don't like the methods of the redirects as they seem to view them as a malicious action. I usually pass the MAC of most of these devices and they function well. iOS 9.0 devices seem to be doing better than their predecessors as far as i've noticed. iPhones seems to have problems about 5-10% of the time and iPad around 20%. Usually this is pop-up blockers and the Safari browser in general. If they use Chrome (or Firefox now thank God) they seem to get the portal page to open without errors. Like most of the previous posters have stated, this is 99% of the time a client problem.
Strange.
When I first tested the Captive Portal (pfSense), Apple devices handled the 'link up with the Wifi Captive Portal of pfSense' quiet well. This was back in the good old iOS 4 or 6 days (2007 !?!). It worked good since.
On of the good (and also bad) things is that Apple device user can't "mess up" the way the connection is build.When a Apple device user (iPhone, iPad) accepts a (new) Wifi connection, the radio link is setup first.
Then, a DHCP request is send, and IP/Gateway/DNS (among others) are retrieved.
Then, the iOS magic kick in. It choses among a couple of hundreds of internally stored URL one URL, and makes a basic 'http' (non-https) request.
This page request should result in 'Ok' or 'Connect'. If so, no more questions, your are connected. This is typical when your are 'at home' (no captive portal from pfSEnse).
Without this answer, iOS presumes a captive portal is present (it knows that a direct Internet connection isn't there yet), and opens up a special, stripped down browser (NOT your installed navigator App like Firefox, or the build in navigator Safari !!) and makes a page request.
This will show captive portal login page.
You can login.I'm using an iPad and iPhone myself, so I tested a lot with these devices. Never hand any troubles (except me fckng up when building my own login page ;) ).
From what I can see, even Android ans M$ devices are login in just fine.All works fine and without surprises, as long as the user didn't activate or use some restriction on his own device.
Important : I always use the latest pfSense with very few 'personal' settings. Most settings are 'by default'.
I did add a certificate for https support on the captive portal - and although it is more complicated to setup, I tend to say that captive portal authentication works even better.
https://www.test-domaine.fr/munin/brit-hotel-fumel.net/pfsense.brit-hotel-fumel.net/portalusers.html
I'm using the Local User Manager.Btw: this can matter : I'm using Cisco/Linksys AP's, flashed with the DD-WRT firmware. They are all running in "simple AP mode" (for example, local DHCP server turned off, etc), Wifi-Isolation activated - and all AP's BLOCK inter-user (client) communication (users can form their own "LAN" on my pfSense LAN segment).
-
My experiences exactly.
This page request should result in 'Ok' or 'Connect'. If so, no more questions, your are connected. This is typical when your are 'at home' (no captive portal from pfSEnse).
The test pages return 'Success' when a portal is not present.
-
I tend to put www.apple.com in as a host name passthrough. Works fine then.
-
@The:
I tend to put www.apple.com in as a host name passthrough. Works fine then.
This could be one of the ten or hundred different URL's hard-coded in iOS.
When you have the change the random "www.apple.com" is used, the iOS thinks it is connected to the net …. and the pfSense Captive portal will still block the portal client to visit any other siteJust wire-shark your portal connection, you probably will not even find a "www.apple.com" (DNS) request .... so why allowing it ?