New to PfSense. Can my hardware work?
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It looks like I only have a ipv6 public address now so its causing issues with my services that need me to enter an ipv4 address to forward.
I did not know that its possible to only use one NIC. Thought you had to have a minimum of two. One for LAN and one for WAN.
A single physical interface can do multiple VLAN's. Each VLAN can be assigned a different virtual interface. Your still limited to the physical speed of the port so that bandwidth is shared by all VLAN's. But you have to have a managed switch to make use of them.
The world is not IPv6 ready yet. Getting there but Im not sure why any ISP would limit you to IPv6 only. Mind sharing who they are?
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It looks like I only have a ipv6 public address now so its causing issues with my services that need me to enter an ipv4 address to forward.
I did not know that its possible to only use one NIC. Thought you had to have a minimum of two. One for LAN and one for WAN.
A single physical interface can do multiple VLAN's. Each VLAN can be assigned a different virtual interface. Your still limited to the physical speed of the port so that bandwidth is shared by all VLAN's. But you have to have a managed switch to make use of them.
The world is not IPv6 ready yet. Getting there but Im not sure why any ISP would limit you to IPv6 only. Mind sharing who they are?
Rogers in Canada.
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Id give them a call, i can't imagine that any ISP would not offer IPv
64 at this point. -
Id give them a call, i can't imagine that any ISP would not offer IPv6 at this point.
I did use a website that managed to show me an ipv4 address so I guess I have both at the moment.
Laos, my switch is a TP-Link TL-SG1024 so I dont believe it supports vlan as its an unmanaged switch. So just so I understand correctly If I bought a dual Intel NIC then one port would be WAN and the other LAN? Or does one need two NICs?
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So just so I understand correctly If I bought a dual Intel NIC then one port would be WAN and the other LAN? Or does one need two NICs?
Ive got a dual port Intel NIC on a customers machine and it works just fine. :)
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Without VLANs the minimum number of ports is 2. It doesn't matter if you get two ports from one NIC or two.
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Without VLANs the minimum number of ports is 2. It doesn't matter if you get two ports from one NIC or two.
Great thanks. Il try to find a cheap NIC to throw in and see how she runs. If not il try to find a used 1u server that Il be able to use.
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Great thanks. Il try to find a cheap NIC to throw in and see how she runs. If not il try to find a used 1u server that Il be able to use.
I'd go the dual NIC server pull route. $20 or $30 on ebay or Amazon. The rest of the hardware is entirely capable. A cheap desktop NIC will certainly work along with the built-in one, but if you have a very fast WAN connection you might be giving up some performance at the top end.
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Great thanks. Il try to find a cheap NIC to throw in and see how she runs. If not il try to find a used 1u server that Il be able to use.
I'd go the dual NIC server pull route. $20 or $30 on ebay or Amazon. The rest of the hardware is entirely capable. A cheap desktop NIC will certainly work along with the built-in one, but if you have a very fast WAN connection you might be giving up some performance at the top end.
Put in an order this morning on ebay. Have to wait a while but decent price. I still wonder if in the future I can fit it in a 1u case
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Put in an order this morning on ebay. Have to wait a while but decent price. I still wonder if in the future I can fit it in a 1u case
Depends on the case, but yes, generally. They'll use a riser card that allows you to install the PCI-e NIC horizontally (parallel to the motherboard) rather than perpendicular.
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I use a Dell R210II - Xeon - 12GB ram, 250SSD
With DUAL 1GB WAN connections from two different providers
No issues whatsoever handles it like a breeze,You can grab the R210's cheap