So…what's the verdict on 2.3?
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I have not been watching the forums long enough if the recent flurry of failed upgrade posts is normal, or atypical.
In my own situation, I uograded from 2.2.6 to 2.3 - ran fine for about 24 hours, then the wan dhcp renewal failed.
Cabled to my pc - received new ip.
Back to the router - same thing.
Thinking my isp might have changed things coincidentally, I put my pc mac address in to spoof it.
No change, but more interestingly, it got stuck.
Nothing I could do (mind you, I only spent about 15 minutes on it) would make it revert to the actual mac address.
So, I started stripping things out.
Along the way, I started seeing errors in the usual suspects - like ladvd.
Gave it up at that point as I had seen too many errors to have much confidence anymore.
Realized my last backup was from 2.2.6 - figured wth and set to defaults and applied that backup.
I figured on reboot it would lose it's mind, but it was pretty much the same as the actual post 2.2.6-2.3 upgrade reboot.
Still, I'll nuke it tonight and roll back to 2.2.6, remove the known flaky packages, and then do another upgrade.
This is my test box, and I have some systems in production that I will probably want to upgrade eventually, so I need to get a feel for how that's going to go.
Anyone have any thoughts on how a botched upgrade would be handled in a scenario with two pf instances under vmware set up for failover?
I still have to set that up, but it would be nice to know any pitfalls in advance.
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It is very nice and smooth. Squid has been a problem for me, but for the time being I just have it off. I didn't update the production equipment but this is very promising.
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My 2.3 experience has been good, but I did get bitten a week ago by an ISP-side change that broke DHCP renewals. They're now doing some sort of weird handshaking like I observe in hotels when getting an IP where there are multiple queries to different private network IPs before it actually vends the lease address.
In my case, I had to disable "Block private networks and loopback addresses" in Interfaces->WAN before I could successfuly pull a new IP. Nothing to do with 2.3, but the timing nearly tripped me up. That was no fun to diagnose either.
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For most, it has been fine. There are some issues we have fixed post-release, and there are bound to be more. We intend to have a 2.3.1 out before the end of the month to address what we've had to far.
If you did have an issue on 2.3 and it has not already been reported, it would be best to attempt the upgrade again and gather as much detail as possible. If it is a new issue and nobody else hits it, the odds of it being fixed are low if we can't reproduce it and have no supporting information.
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As with all semi-major upgrades, if you don't have a simple setup and you have no test-bed, wait for at least x.x.1 If you can afford to test or reinstall, then go ahead.
I have a simple setup, and the only issues I had was due to my own prior misconfigurations or my RRD data being cleared and not importing correctly from my pre-2.3 backup.
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I miss Apache with mod_proxy.
I was actually planning on using a pfSense setup as a GW for some sensitive systems with Apache and mod_proxy :'(
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For me I can not get Squid to work and with out squid squidguard is also down I have read all the posts double and triple checked the settings removed rebooted and reinstalled them try a dozen different command prompts people have recommended with no luck I am slammed at work so I am going to leave it for now and probably work on it on a Sunday so if I make an error the whole office isnt offline
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Seems to work fine. Absolutely HATE the new theme and hope someone will make the old one an option again.
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I like the new interface, specially the Dark skin theme
much much easier on the eyes.reading the forum, it seems like many people had some config / setups that broke after the upgrade,
since I didn't have much set (net install 2.2.6 to 2.3) I opted for factory reset option to start fresh. -
I am having several issues and will be rolling back to the last version. I love the new lay out. But, I have had several crash reports in the last few days. Never had an issue with the last version. But, 2.3 looks promising. I'm relitvly new to pfSense about 8 months now. Haven't had any problems until now. I'm guessing a few tweaks here and there and 2.3.1 will be just fine.
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For me I can not get Squid to work and with out squid squidguard is also down I have read all the posts double and triple checked the settings removed rebooted and reinstalled them try a dozen different command prompts people have recommended with no luck I am slammed at work so I am going to leave it for now and probably work on it on a Sunday so if I make an error the whole office isnt offline
I am in the same boat with you on this one. I've tried everything I can think of. When I turn transparent proxy off and have network connection setup to use the proxy manually everything works great. Once I use transparent proxy only SSL sites work. And of course that is bc they bypass the proxy. I am on 3 different lan interfaces and I haven't tried the "main" one. It does say in ACL "The proxy interface subnet is already an allowed subnet. All the other subnets won't be able to use the proxy." Which confuses me greatly. Waiting to see what the deal is with that.
EDIT: Ok I got off my lazy butt and checked the computers on the other subnets/interfaces. The transparent proxy works fine on one of the 3 nic/subnets but not the others.
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Seems to work fine. Absolutely HATE the new theme and hope someone will make the old one an option again.
That won't happen. Bootstrap is not just a new theme, but a significant change in the way the user interface is implemented. The old user interface will not reappear in pfSense 2.3 onwards as the code implementing it does not exist in 2.3. Further, you cannot graft the 2.2 UI onto the 2.3 back end, as there have been so many changes in the back end.
The new UI is something of a shock to the system if you are not used to it, but it is worth persevering with. It has many advantages, such as being easier to use on a mobile browser.
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Well, at least the color-theme of the old interface would be nice to be back - this all-white and all-black are the two extremes. The old one was much more human-friendly - I'm talking about the colors here.
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So far I've experienced 4 issues. 2 of which have been resolved.
Symptom: DPinger wouldn't start.
Cause: Incompatible gateway monitoring parameters brought forward from 2.2.6.
Solution: Adjust the gateway monitoring parameters to be compatible.
Forum Thread: https://forum.pfsense.org/index.php?topic=109712.msg610813Symptom: Slow to boot, initial sluggishness, notifications of aliases not available when loading firewall rules.
Cause: URL table aliases not backed up / restored with RAM Disk enabled.
Solution: Patch code to backup URL alias tables with RAM Disk enabled.
Bug Report: https://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/6189
GitHub Pull request: https://github.com/pfsense/pfsense/pull/2878Symptom: Notification with missing 'LAN address' when loading firewall rules during boot up.
Cause: TBD. Thought to be a race condition.
Solution: TBD
Workaround: Created an alias with the LAN interface IP address to use in the rules instead.
Bug Report: https://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/6133Symptom: 1st OpenVPN instance reported as stopped/not running and can't be started. But 'ps uxawww' shows it as running with different pid than is in the pid file.
Cause: TBD. Thought to be a race condition.
Solution: TBD.
Workaround: Either reboot or kill the process and then restart the OpenVPN instance.
Bug Report: https://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/61322.3-RELEASE (i386)
built on Mon Apr 11 18:12:06 CDT 2016
FreeBSD 10.3-RELEASEIntel(R) Pentium(R) 4 CPU 2.66GHz
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@/dev/null:
I have never has so much grief from a network device
I have tossed my m1n1 in the trash
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the checksum was bad on the site so my update failed with 'can't verify image'.
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the serial port works then doesn't, and does.
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then for some reason I had to reboot the device several time for it to get the full 2.3 nanoBDS image just to load.
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after I get the image to load i find the UI barely fastest enough to use.
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come back 10 hours later to find that the WAN port went down UI is completely unresponsive. gateway timeout issues just trying to load the login page.
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can not get the serial port to work at all anymore.
having to reboot every other day.
Not to discount your issues but from all your information provided sounds like your box was giving up the ghost. And way underpowered to even consider this upgrade.
I did my first 6 boxes (of all different types of equipment) without so much as a hiccup. 7th box had drive errors new drive cause the boss is cheap … 8th got scheduled replacement...
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@/dev/null:
I have never has so much grief from a network device
I have tossed my m1n1 in the trash
With respect, where was your reversion strategy? All you needed to do was install 2.3 on a different card, then restore a copy of your configuration file. If 2.3 failed, you merely had to pull the 2.3 card and reinsert your 2.2.x card to return to normal operation.
It would be good to know your hardware specification but, as chpalmer has said, it sounds like you were using underpowered hardware that might also have been showing hardware problems and/or compatibility issues with FreeBSD 10.3. pfSense 2.3-RELEASE is not some random untested junk that has been hastily cobbled together and shipped - it's undergone lengthy development and testing. As with all major upgrades, the magnitude of the changes and the impossibility of testing the code in all possible environments has shaken out some regressions, but 2.3.1 will be along within a few weeks to mop up many of those problems.
I'm not surprised your attempt to get free telephone support was knocked back. Commercial support is on a pay per incident basis. The developers are working flat out dealing with issues thrown up by the 2.3 release and with incidents submitted by paying customers. In any event, the answer to such profound issues with unsupported hardware was almost certain to be 'try new/different hardware, or post on the forums to see if the community can help'.
The hardware requirements gradually creep upwards release by release. Most of the development is now done on amd64, which is the recommended version for all 64 bit capable hardware. i386 support will eventually disappear. Inevitably, therefore, amd64 is better tested than i386 these days.
NanoBSD support will also disappear in time, as it is not needed for modern embedded hardware.
Not to discount your issues but from all your information provided sounds like your box was giving up the ghost. And way underpowered to even consider this upgrade.
I did my first 6 boxes (of all different types of equipment) without so much as a hiccup. 7th box had drive errors new drive cause the boss is cheap … 8th got scheduled replacement...
I agree with your analysis and note my experience is similar. Having noted the contents of the release notes, I had no problems upgrading a production firewall to 2.3. I did have a reversion plan to go back to 2.2.6 if I encountered insurmountable problems with 2.3.
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For most, it has been fine. There are some issues we have fixed post-release, and there are bound to be more. We intend to have a 2.3.1 out before the end of the month to address what we've had to far.
If you did have an issue on 2.3 and it has not already been reported, it would be best to attempt the upgrade again and gather as much detail as possible. If it is a new issue and nobody else hits it, the odds of it being fixed are low if we can't reproduce it and have no supporting information.
I think my first 2.3 upgrade exposed deficiencies in my setup more than anything else.
My current 2.3 on an expendable box seems stable enough.
I have to agree with others though that the ui is lacking.
It's the old problem of developers developing.
They don't require repeated attempts at creating a firewall rule - at least not like I often do.
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The mod/apply/test cycle with the new ui requires a lot more steps.Is there a toggle somewhere I missed to add the Clear and Filter buttons back to more or less where they were?
With the Rule as a column, and entries limited to 20, it wasn't too bad to keep refreshing as you made changes.
The new layout is kind of awkward.
Even if that's entirely my own deficiency, it will keep 2.3 on the back burner for me for a while.
I'm not sure if the change to the way var usage is displayed would have save me from myself earlier.
The real problem for me in 2.2.6 was that I wasn't paying attention - and 3.4mb is NOT enough for /var/run when a crash dump lands there.
I didn't notice it right away, as it had never been an issue, but when php-fpm crashed and filled /var/run, it caused me to hit Google, and without understanding the ramifications, I quickly jumped into the ui to set temp and var to what I though was a generous 512MB.
Given that I use squid at that site, 512MB isn't nearly enough, though I suppose I can buy a little time by dialing the cache back.
Guess I'd best jump on that, as the customers will be hitting it hard in two hours.
Is there a non destructive way to move var back to the hd?
For some reason, I had issues when I stopped by there to due a quick reinstall last night.
Not pf related - I think the pos system was acting as a rogue dhcp server, which really screwed things up due to the vlans.
Need to remember to take that offline next time.
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I started the upgrade to 2.3 from the firmware upgrade menu in the web UI. After the reboot it hangs nothing happens I started TOP in the CLI to see if there was still some activity but nothing. I waited like 90 minutes but it did not come up. I figured I can wait til tomorrow or I try another restart, with the same result it hangs on boot.
I rolled back to 2.2.6 and thats what I will be running for now. Maybe in a few months I try again.
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They don't require repeated attempts at creating a firewall rule - at least not like I often do.
The mod/apply/test cycle with the new ui requires a lot more steps.How so?
Is there a toggle somewhere I missed to add the Clear and Filter buttons back to more or less where they were?
With the Rule as a column, and entries limited to 20, it wasn't too bad to keep refreshing as you made changes.
The new layout is kind of awkward.
To which screen specifically? The logs? System > General Setup, check "Log Filter" and "Manage Log" and it will show the panels on the page. Though if you only want to see if traffic is hitting a rule, just look at the hit counters on the firewall rule list now.
I'm not sure if the change to the way var usage is displayed would have save me from myself earlier.
The real problem for me in 2.2.6 was that I wasn't paying attention - and 3.4mb is NOT enough for /var/run when a crash dump lands there.
The disk usage display for /var/run has been the same since 2.2.x. It's random that the php core ended up there, it doesn't always land there if it crashes.
Given that I use squid at that site, 512MB isn't nearly enough, though I suppose I can buy a little time by dialing the cache back.
On a full install /var/run is a tiny RAM disk that only holds PID files and some other small flag files, it doesn't contain data. The squid cache is in /var, which is typically a part of / unless you have done a custom install or activated the option for /var in RAM.
Is there a non destructive way to move var back to the hd?
See above, /var/run/ is not all of /var/ – If you did activate /var in RAM, it's under System > Advanced, Miscellaneous, and would not have changed automatically.
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pfsense team. Thanks for all your hard work.
While I ran to minor issues, I am very pleased with the end product. the UI its amazing and the dark theme just rocks.
Keep up the good work.