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    pfSense on dual cpu server (Dell Poweredge)

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    • provelsP
      provels @az
      last edited by

      @az FWIW, I'd advise that I have run the latest 2.3 pSense on a 1GHz VIA chip with 1GB memory and a 4GB SSD up to 100Mbps speeds (the capability of the NICs), and run it virtualized on a 10-year old quad core Intel box with GB NICs at 300Mbps (max of my ISP). Nothing wrong with hobby boxes, but to run something like this with pfSense only 24/7 would be a waste. And, Lord, the NOISE! If me, maybe, I'd load it up for with Nas4Free for virtualization and storage and run pfSense in VirtualBox there.

      Peder

      MAIN - pfSense+ 24.11-RELEASE - Adlink MXE-5401, i7, 16 GB RAM, 64 GB SSD. 500 GB HDD for SyslogNG
      BACKUP - pfSense+ 23.01-RELEASE - Hyper-V Virtual Machine, Gen 1, 2 v-CPUs, 3 GB RAM, 8GB VHDX (Dynamic)

      GrimsonG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • GrimsonG
        Grimson Banned @provels
        last edited by

        @provels said in pfSense on dual cpu server (Dell Poweredge):

        I'd advise that I have run the latest 2.3 pSense

        You know that 2.3 is EOL for quite some time now and has multiple security issues.

        run pfSense in VirtualBox there.

        Urgh, don't do that for production. Use Proxmox or ESXi, VirtualBox is only useful for testing.

        provelsP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • stephenw10S
          stephenw10 Netgate Administrator @az
          last edited by

          @az said in pfSense on dual cpu server (Dell Poweredge):

          Getting my own fiber splices and everything (not to rub it in or anything)

          Arggh it stings! ๐Ÿ˜‰

          Unless you're running your own VPN concentrator or something that box will be 95% idle almost all the time. If you run virtualised you can use that processing power for something else with other VMs running along side pfSense.

          If you are really looking for maximum OpenVPN throughput you are better off with a CPU that offers the best single thread performance you can get. As you said OpenVPN is single threaded. One way of increasing it is to run multiple OpenVPN connections and load balance them.

          Steve

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • provelsP
            provels @Grimson
            last edited by provels

            @Grimson Yes, I run 2.4.4_2 in VM. The 2.3.5_2 is just there for backup (also an 800 MHz Via backing that up...)
            What's "Production" for a hobby user? :)

            Peder

            MAIN - pfSense+ 24.11-RELEASE - Adlink MXE-5401, i7, 16 GB RAM, 64 GB SSD. 500 GB HDD for SyslogNG
            BACKUP - pfSense+ 23.01-RELEASE - Hyper-V Virtual Machine, Gen 1, 2 v-CPUs, 3 GB RAM, 8GB VHDX (Dynamic)

            GrimsonG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • GrimsonG
              Grimson Banned @provels
              last edited by

              @provels said in pfSense on dual cpu server (Dell Poweredge):

              What's "Production" for a hobby user? :)

              Your main gateway to the Internet.

              provelsP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • A
                az
                last edited by

                Here's a question then: I know this strays a little bit away from pfSense but I'm also looking at some supermicro servers to run FreeNAS on. Would it maybe be a decent idea to run both on the same machine as VMs considering I'm running in a very small home environment?

                GrimsonG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • GrimsonG
                  Grimson Banned @az
                  last edited by

                  @az said in pfSense on dual cpu server (Dell Poweredge):

                  Here's a question then: I know this strays a little bit away from pfSense but I'm also looking at some supermicro servers to run FreeNAS on. Would it maybe be a decent idea to run both on the same machine as VMs considering I'm running in a very small home environment?

                  Yes, that is a pretty common use case.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • provelsP
                    provels @Grimson
                    last edited by

                    @Grimson Good enough to learn concepts on, though, I think. But, yes, ESXi would be better and also free (and likely better hardware support). At any rate, OP is still total overkill.

                    Peder

                    MAIN - pfSense+ 24.11-RELEASE - Adlink MXE-5401, i7, 16 GB RAM, 64 GB SSD. 500 GB HDD for SyslogNG
                    BACKUP - pfSense+ 23.01-RELEASE - Hyper-V Virtual Machine, Gen 1, 2 v-CPUs, 3 GB RAM, 8GB VHDX (Dynamic)

                    GrimsonG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • A
                      az
                      last edited by

                      I've just discovered an 8700k I have sitting around as well so I may use that and build a cheap machine out of spare parts and used stuff from Ebay for my router but I'm still really interested in this conversation.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • GrimsonG
                        Grimson Banned @provels
                        last edited by

                        @provels said in pfSense on dual cpu server (Dell Poweredge):

                        @Grimson Good enough to learn concepts on, though, I think.

                        For that you setup a virtual LAB environment, even in VirtualBox if you insist on it. For security reasons you don't use your main firewall/gateway for experimenting, or you will be demoted from hobby user to home user. ๐Ÿ˜‰

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • A
                          az
                          last edited by

                          This has been an awesome first experience with forums. Just wanted to thank all of you for an awesome introduction into the community.

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