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    I5 5250U 4 LAN Home computer Q355G4 install question

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Problems Installing or Upgrading pfSense Software
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    • P
      phochiom
      last edited by

      Thanks, didn't know about these converters, will save me some money. With regards to LAN ports, can you please tell me which number did you assign to Windows? I assume it should be 1, or maybe it doesn't matter. I'm on Virgin Media 200/10 and would use only 2 of the LAN ports, 1 for Windows and 2 for LAN, which will go to my R7000 LAN 1.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • C
        CaladorGCS
        last edited by

        @phochiom:

        I also bought the same box from Qotom. It arrived today, pre-configured with 8 GB (Kingston branded) and 120 GB m.2 SSD (Phison branded).
        Tried to install pfSense 2.3.3. I only have a TV that supports HDMI, so I could not see the whole text, especially at the bottom where is asks you to configure the various steps. So obviously I could not configure to my liking.
        Just wanted to ask: is there a specific order for the 4 LAN ports to attach the WAN cable and the LAN? I used LAN1 for WAN and LAN2 for LAN (I attached a Netgear R7000 with stock firmware acting as Access Point and had IP 192.168.1.2). I could not get to the GUI of pfSense at 192.168.1.1 (neither with http or https).
        So I guess I will need to buy a monitor with HDMI port to be able to configure pfSense.
        Any help, or ideas, is appreciated.
        Thanks

        Mine were out of order too and I had to swich them using Option 2 on th PfSence unit. Used the MAC to figure out the order. Mine was ordered 1, 4, 2, 3.

        pfSense© running on…

        • CPU: Intel Core i5-5250U Processor (3M Cache, up to 2.70GHz, Broadwell) + Intel 4 GBit LAN

        • Configuration: RAM 8GB DDR3; SSD 128GB; AES-NI; Hyperthreaded; Model: Qotom-Q355G4

        Switch - NETGEAR ProSAFE JGS516PE 16-Port Gigabit PoE WM (Plus) & GS105Ev2 5-Port WM (Plus)
        Access Point - (2) Unifi 802.11ac Dual-Radio PRO

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • occamsrazorO
          occamsrazor
          last edited by

          Hi,

          Just curious what kind of installation you are doing… on USB keys or on the SSD?
          I was reading this and like the idea of using ZFS:
          https://forum.pfsense.org/index.php?topic=126597.0
          ...but on the other hand using the SSD seems like it would be fastest.

          Thanks.

          pfSense CE on Qotom Q355G4 8GB RAM/60GB SSD
          Ubiquiti Unifi wired and wireless network, APC UPSs
          Mac OSX and IOS devices, QNAP NAS

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • W
            Waqar.UK
            last edited by

            I used this as a guide to install  https://doc.pfsense.org/index.php/Installing_pfSense

            To write images: https://doc.pfsense.org/index.php/Writing_Disk_Images  - Image Writer for Windows / Win32 Disk Imager is much easier to SSD.
            I just plugged in my wan when setup asked to plug in my wan cable and same for lan.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • occamsrazorO
              occamsrazor
              last edited by

              Thanks, that guide is useful although I plan to install 2.4 straight away. From what I read 2.4 uses a different install type:

              https://doc.pfsense.org/index.php/2.4_New_Features_and_Changes#Operating_System_.2F_Architecture_changes

              I'm just planning ahead to see what will be the best combination of media on which to install on in terms of SSD (and if size?) or USB keys (if so 1 or 2 keys and what size?). I'll ask a question on the 2.4.0 ZFS How To thread.

              pfSense CE on Qotom Q355G4 8GB RAM/60GB SSD
              Ubiquiti Unifi wired and wireless network, APC UPSs
              Mac OSX and IOS devices, QNAP NAS

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • W
                Waqar.UK
                last edited by

                @occamsrazor:

                Thanks, that guide is useful although I plan to install 2.4 straight away. From what I read 2.4 uses a different install type:

                https://doc.pfsense.org/index.php/2.4_New_Features_and_Changes#Operating_System_.2F_Architecture_changes

                I'm just planning ahead to see what will be the best combination of media on which to install on in terms of SSD (and if size?) or USB keys (if so 1 or 2 keys and what size?). I'll ask a question on the 2.4.0 ZFS How To thread.

                Use a SSD, I had a spare 120GB Kingston hyperx that I was planning to use for a different project.
                To install, any drive, I used a 4GB sandisk usb 2.0 that I bought many years ago.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • occamsrazorO
                  occamsrazor
                  last edited by

                  @PingTheNet:

                  Mine were out of order too and I had to swich them using Option 2 on th PfSence unit. Used the MAC to figure out the order. Mine was ordered 1, 4, 2, 3.

                  Mine were also out of order. igb0 is 1 and igb1 is 4.

                  What is this "Option 2" method you speak of for changing them?

                  pfSense CE on Qotom Q355G4 8GB RAM/60GB SSD
                  Ubiquiti Unifi wired and wireless network, APC UPSs
                  Mac OSX and IOS devices, QNAP NAS

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • P
                    phochiom
                    last edited by

                    @occamsrazor:

                    @PingTheNet:

                    Mine were out of order too and I had to swich them using Option 2 on th PfSence unit. Used the MAC to figure out the order. Mine was ordered 1, 4, 2, 3.

                    Mine were also out of order. igb0 is 1 and igb1 is 4.

                    What is this "Option 2" method you speak of for changing them?

                    Same here for NICs, exactly same order.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • C
                      ChefRayB
                      last edited by

                      Ordered: QOTOM Q355G4 I5 5250U 8GB RAM 120GB SSD
                      Delivery: 15-28 days

                      I will report after I receive it and install pfSense on the box.  I plan to install OpenVPN client and compare the bandwidth against my laptop.

                      reference:

                      https://www.aliexpress.com/store/product/QOTOM-Q355G4-2017-New-fanless-X86-4-LAN-Micro-Computer-I5-5250U-Dual-core-onboard-1080P/108231_32800711474.html

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • C
                        ChefRayB
                        last edited by

                        Update: Received hardware Q355G4, exactly as described by other users

                        Please keep in mind to install AMD64 pfsense packages.

                        If you install i386 package,  the package installation will work but you will encounter CAS Latency timeouts when formatting SSD and reboot loops.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • C
                          ChefRayB
                          last edited by

                          I am back, as promised, I am sharing my results & experience with qotom G355Q4 !

                          Long story short, box is great, fanless and perhaps a bit too powerful for home usage!  8)

                          Hardware: qotom Q355G4 with SSD
                          BIOS: hyper-threading disabled/
                          pfsense advanced: powerd enabled, AES-NI Enabled, Thermal = Intel Core
                          pfsense system tunable: sysctl dev.cpu.[0|1].cx_lowest=C3
                          Client: Gigabit connectivity
                          Packages: avahi installed
                          ISP Speed: 100 Mbs
                          VPN Provider:  StrongVPN (AES 256 bit, MDS 128bit Auth, Adaptive compression)
                          Room Temperature: 24 Celsius

                          idle power consumption
                          powerd enabled, minimum, 10-11 watts, 52-53 Celsius, casing 44 Celsius
                          powerd enabled, adaptive, 10-11 watts, 52-53 Celsius, casing 44 Celsius
                          powerd enabled, maximum, 11-12 watts,54-57 Celsius, casing 45 Celsius
                          powerd disabled, 11-12 watts, 55-57 Celsius, casing 45 Celsius

                          Conclusion: When idle the box seems to always need 10-12 watts regardless of the power mode. Is there better hardware out there that requires less wattage, support AES-NI, descent clock speed (Since OpenVPN is Single Core) and can provide 100Mbs output ?  If you find one, share it with everyone in the forum !

                          Bandwidth test with ISP (no encryption) using Bandwidth Website
                          110 Mbs with powerd minimum, cpu <10%, 10-11 watts
                          110 Mbs with powerd adaptive, cpu  <10 %, 11 watts,
                          110 Mbs with powerd maximum, cpu <10%, 11-15 watts peak
                          110 Mbs with powerd disabled, cpu <10%, 11-16 watts peak

                          Conclusion: My ISP seems to provide me with 100 Mbs download speed

                          Bandwidth test using ISP downloading 5-6 HUGE FILES simultaneously for a good period of time :)
                          110 Mbs with powerd minimum, cpu 20 %, 11 watts, CPU 52 Celsius, Router casing 44 Celsius
                          110 Mbs with powerd adaptive, cpu  20 %, 11 watts, CPU 52 Celsius, Router casing 44 Celsius
                          110 Mbs with powerd maximum, cpu 20%, 14 watts (weird),  CPU 52 Celsius, Router casing 44 Celsius
                          110 Mbs with powerd disabled, cpu 20%,  11 watts, CPU 52 Celsius, Router casing 44 Celsius

                          Conclusion:  I can download 5-6 Huge files @ 110 Mbs regardless of the power saving mode because there is no encryption.

                          Bandwidth test using Internet through OpenVPN (encryption) using Bandwidth Website (tested a few times)
                          60 Mbs with powerd minimum, cpu <10 %, 10-11 watts,
                          110 Mbs with powerd adaptive, cpu  <10 %, 11 watts,
                          110 Mbs with powerd maximum, cpu <10%, 11-15 watts peak
                          110 Mbs with powerd disabled, cpu <10%, 11-16 watts peak

                          Conclusion: powerd minimum doesn't seem to work well with OpenVPN….

                          Bandwidth test using Internet through OpenVPN (encryption) downloading 5-6 HUGE FILES simultaneously for a good period of time :)
                          50 Mbs with powerd minimum, cpu 25 %, 11 watts, CPU 52 Celsius, Router casing 44 Celsius
                          100 Mbs with powerd adaptive, cpu  35 %, 11-12 watts, CPU 54 Celsius, Router casing 45 Celsius
                          100 Mbs with powerd maximum, cpu 12%, 15 watts,  CPU 63 Celsius, Router casing 46 Celsius
                          100 Mbs with powerd disabled, cpu 15%, 15.4 watts, CPU 64 Celsius, Router casing 47 Celsius

                          Overall Conclusion:Bandwidth is slightly affected by encryption (assuming good hardware & vpn provider).  If you want to save energy & generate a bit less heat, you can perhaps consider using powerd adaptive mode.  Perhaps the next generation of energy efficient Celeron might be a better choice for home if you don't plan to use pfsense packages that are CPU intensive.

                          Geek Test (powerd -a min -m 600 -M 600 forced it via  Shell command)
                          60 Mbs with powerd enable, min freq 600, max freq 600, cpu 30-40%, 11-12 watts, CPU 52 Celsius, Router casing 44 Celsius

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • T
                            tfast500
                            last edited by

                            Thanks for that info.

                            seriously considering purchasing one of these Qotom Q355G4 units.

                            350 seems like a lot of money for a home router/firewall

                            Sounds like performance is about as good as you get for a low powered device tho.

                            I am wondering if this would work for me?

                            I run 60/5  but will be using multiple encrypted vpns, and many vlans. Fiber is currently being put in and expect to be on 100/100 in the next year or two…(cant wait)

                            I have about 30+ devices on my network (vms, tablets, laptops, desktops, phones, servers, tv boxes, and surveillance.) (all part of my homelab)

                            Will this little booger keep up? I also would like to mess with snort, squid and other packages.

                            Intrested in bridging the interfaces. 2 or 3 to ports to feed my 10gbe switch

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • C
                              ChefRayB
                              last edited by

                              Perhaps try to run pfsense on a virtual box to get a good feel and decide if pfsense is a good for you.
                              100 Mbs seems to be  achievable and sustainable for OpenVPN.
                              10 Gbe switch, why do you need 10 Gbe internally ? (you can  msg me !)

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • T
                                tfast500
                                last edited by

                                I have 4 sfp+10gbe ports available from my two stacked switches. They connect to my proxmox server, freenas server, and two workstations in my office. I really dont need that kind of speed but it sure makes transfers super fast. I wanted to play around with enterprise level technology and it was cheap enough to do as part of my home lab.

                                I should have also stated that I currently run pfsense on a dell optiflex 780 sff but this thing throws out heat it has a Quad core Q8400. I have not had any issues with it other then power consumption and heat…

                                I am wanting to see if a small <15watt device would fulfill my needs.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • C
                                  ChefRayB
                                  last edited by

                                  In the <15 TDP, the qotom Q355G4 is a good contender :)

                                  Retrospectively, I would have preferred <10 TDP but I wasn't able to find one that had AES-NI, enough power for additional packages, 4x Intel NICS and fan-less chassis.

                                  Life is too short :)

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • R
                                    rclar
                                    last edited by

                                    I have one of these that I just set up, and I am getting miserable performance on the wan connection. I just pulled out my fios router which I was consistently getting 25/25 with, and now I am typically getting 2~4 down and 25 up.

                                    Does anyone have suggestions on what I should look towards to try to diagnose?

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • X
                                      xMutex
                                      last edited by

                                      @ChefRayB:

                                      I am back, as promised, I am sharing my results & experience with qotom G355Q4 !

                                      Long story short, box is great, fanless and perhaps a bit too powerful for home usage!  8)

                                      Hardware: qotom Q355G4 with SSD
                                      BIOS: hyper-threading disabled/
                                      pfsense advanced: powerd enabled, AES-NI Enabled, Thermal = Intel Core
                                      pfsense system tunable: sysctl dev.cpu.[0|1].cx_lowest=C3
                                      Client: Gigabit connectivity
                                      Packages: avahi installed
                                      ISP Speed: 100 Mbs
                                      VPN Provider:  StrongVPN (AES 256 bit, MDS 128bit Auth, Adaptive compression)
                                      Room Temperature: 24 Celsius

                                      idle power consumption
                                      powerd enabled, minimum, 10-11 watts, 52-53 Celsius, casing 44 Celsius
                                      powerd enabled, adaptive, 10-11 watts, 52-53 Celsius, casing 44 Celsius
                                      powerd enabled, maximum, 11-12 watts,54-57 Celsius, casing 45 Celsius
                                      powerd disabled, 11-12 watts, 55-57 Celsius, casing 45 Celsius

                                      Conclusion: When idle the box seems to always need 10-12 watts regardless of the power mode. Is there better hardware out there that requires less wattage, support AES-NI, descent clock speed (Since OpenVPN is Single Core) and can provide 100Mbs output ?  If you find one, share it with everyone in the forum !

                                      Bandwidth test with ISP (no encryption) using Bandwidth Website
                                      110 Mbs with powerd minimum, cpu <10%, 10-11 watts
                                      110 Mbs with powerd adaptive, cpu  <10 %, 11 watts,
                                      110 Mbs with powerd maximum, cpu <10%, 11-15 watts peak
                                      110 Mbs with powerd disabled, cpu <10%, 11-16 watts peak

                                      Conclusion: My ISP seems to provide me with 100 Mbs download speed

                                      Bandwidth test using ISP downloading 5-6 HUGE FILES simultaneously for a good period of time :)
                                      110 Mbs with powerd minimum, cpu 20 %, 11 watts, CPU 52 Celsius, Router casing 44 Celsius
                                      110 Mbs with powerd adaptive, cpu  20 %, 11 watts, CPU 52 Celsius, Router casing 44 Celsius
                                      110 Mbs with powerd maximum, cpu 20%, 14 watts (weird),  CPU 52 Celsius, Router casing 44 Celsius
                                      110 Mbs with powerd disabled, cpu 20%,  11 watts, CPU 52 Celsius, Router casing 44 Celsius

                                      Conclusion:  I can download 5-6 Huge files @ 110 Mbs regardless of the power saving mode because there is no encryption.

                                      Bandwidth test using Internet through OpenVPN (encryption) using Bandwidth Website (tested a few times)
                                      60 Mbs with powerd minimum, cpu <10 %, 10-11 watts,
                                      110 Mbs with powerd adaptive, cpu  <10 %, 11 watts,
                                      110 Mbs with powerd maximum, cpu <10%, 11-15 watts peak
                                      110 Mbs with powerd disabled, cpu <10%, 11-16 watts peak

                                      Conclusion: powerd minimum doesn't seem to work well with OpenVPN….

                                      Bandwidth test using Internet through OpenVPN (encryption) downloading 5-6 HUGE FILES simultaneously for a good period of time :)
                                      50 Mbs with powerd minimum, cpu 25 %, 11 watts, CPU 52 Celsius, Router casing 44 Celsius
                                      100 Mbs with powerd adaptive, cpu  35 %, 11-12 watts, CPU 54 Celsius, Router casing 45 Celsius
                                      100 Mbs with powerd maximum, cpu 12%, 15 watts,  CPU 63 Celsius, Router casing 46 Celsius
                                      100 Mbs with powerd disabled, cpu 15%, 15.4 watts, CPU 64 Celsius, Router casing 47 Celsius

                                      Overall Conclusion:Bandwidth is slightly affected by encryption (assuming good hardware & vpn provider).  If you want to save energy & generate a bit less heat, you can perhaps consider using powerd adaptive mode.  Perhaps the next generation of energy efficient Celeron might be a better choice for home if you don't plan to use pfsense packages that are CPU intensive.

                                      Geek Test (powerd -a min -m 600 -M 600 forced it via  Shell command)
                                      60 Mbs with powerd enable, min freq 600, max freq 600, cpu 30-40%, 11-12 watts, CPU 52 Celsius, Router casing 44 Celsius

                                      Hey ChefRayB!

                                      Did you do any benchmark to see what kind of VPN speeds that HW maxes out at? I wish to get one that is future-proof (pref can handle 500/100) with vpn, what do you think?

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • ivorI
                                        ivor
                                        last edited by

                                        There's already a qotom topic, please ask questions there. Thanks.

                                        Need help fast? Our support is available 24/7 https://www.netgate.com/support/

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