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    Disable pfSense or find password

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General pfSense Questions
    26 Posts 7 Posters 3.1k Views
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    • B
      bigjess007
      last edited by bigjess007

      After a late night of ladder climbing I think I've traced them. I just want to preface, we have an unfinished basement.

      The modem is by our basement door, a red wire comes out of it, and traces along the ceiling to this area where black plastic is for some reason stapled to the rafters, and comes out and plugs into a "IN" port on a powerstrip. Then, one wire comes from the out and plugs into our server, and another one into the D-LINK. These powerstrips are by belkin, if that helps at all - but there's way too much plugged into them for me to try to see what kind they are.

      A few wires come out of the D-LINK and trace to the Asus Router.

      I know the DD-WRT login/pass as it's in the doc (luckily) but I tried doing that with PFSense and it's password denied.

      I did also find this router (the label was peeling off and I can't read it's exact type besides the fact it says linksys) that was plastered in T Mobile logos. I know my Dad set up a separate network to put my friends on (lord only knows why) and I unplugged it and nothing happened, so I have to assume that's what it was.

      There's also something called PRTG on his computer, but it won't send the OTP to the email for me to password reset so I have limited access.

      Am I way in over my head? I'd love to have a crash course of Intro To Comp Sci - believe me, but I'm wondering if it's just better to just reset and rebegin.

      If you want me to take pictures of anything, let me know.

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      • B
        bigjess007 @chpalmer
        last edited by

        @chpalmer @provels

        Above is the wire tracing I found, and here's the IP's you requested. We're south of Pittsburgh.

        https://imgur.com/a/kEjfInA

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        • chpalmerC
          chpalmer
          last edited by

          If you can get to your pfsense router then try the defaults

          user= admin

          pass= pfsense

          Do you know what hardware your pfsense router is running on?

          Triggering snowflakes one by one..
          Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-4590T CPU @ 2.00GHz on an M400 WG box.

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          • stephenw10S
            stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
            last edited by

            We don't know that AFAIK. But from that screen shot and the fact the first device after the modem is a server I suggest it may be running in virtual box on the server.
            If that is the case the pfSense console would be accessed through virtual box there.

            Steve

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            • B
              bigjess007
              last edited by bigjess007

              @stephenw10 @chpalmer
              There is a desktop icon for Oracle VM Virtualbox.
              Here's what I found when I clicked it. We use PBX for our home phone, so I have to assume that's what all this is?

              I can plug a monitor into the server, I'll do that and see what I can find.

              https://imgur.com/a/vkJqEYF

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              • stephenw10S
                stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                last edited by

                Hmm, OK well no VMs powered on there so it can't be in VirtualBox (even if it was misnamed) assuming you can still hit the pfSense login screen.
                If the 'server' is the first connected there though perhaps it has some other virtualisation platform running there? VMWare workstation perhaps? Or maybe what you're connecting to as the 'server' is actually another VM inside some hypersisor running on the hardware? Though running VirtualBox inside a VM makes little sense....

                Maybe if we could see photos of exactly how this is wired we might be able to make better suggestions.

                Steve

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                • kiokomanK
                  kiokoman LAYER 8
                  last edited by kiokoman

                  it can be under another user, if it launch it at boot it coul be under root user launched with --type headless
                  ps aux on a terminal would clarify this, if it's a linux machine, can't say from the photo

                  ̿' ̿'\̵͇̿̿\з=(◕_◕)=ε/̵͇̿̿/'̿'̿ ̿
                  Please do not use chat/PM to ask for help
                  we must focus on silencing this @guest character. we must make up lies and alter the copyrights !
                  Don't forget to Upvote with the 👍 button for any post you find to be helpful.

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                  • B
                    biggsy
                    last edited by

                    @bigjess007 said in Disable pfSense or find password:

                    I can plug a monitor into the server, I'll do that and see what I can find.

                    Post a photo of what's displayed. If it's the pfSense console you're in business - at least as far as resetting the password is concerned.

                    BTW, If there are just a lot of messages on the screen you may have to hit enter to bring up the pfSense console menu.

                    If it's not the pfSense console, the photo will help.

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                    • B
                      bigjess007
                      last edited by bigjess007

                      Great news! I have password reset pfSense! I found a computer behind another computer, and after plugging a monitor into it I was able to access the password reset thingy.

                      Bad news:

                      Something in my unplugging - replugging of different computers has messed up the one computer that my dad remoted into (that had PRTG, and a bunch of other things) and now it's not letting me remote into it anymore.

                      Does DD-WRT tie into pFsense? Can't I just get rid of DD-WRT? Can I do that without that computer? Everytime I see him adding things to the whitelist it's always in DD-WRT, but I don't know how to get to that from here.

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                      • B
                        biggsy
                        last edited by biggsy

                        DD-WRT is almost certainly running on the Asus RT-AC68U and could be where your dad whitelisted computers to connect to the WiFi.

                        Are you saying that the PRTG+ computer was how your dad got to DD-WRT?

                        EDIT:

                        Well done on the pfSense password reset.

                        When you say " . . . in my unplugging - replugging . . . ", did you disconnect/reconnect the power from one of the computers or just a LAN cable? Removing a monitor or keyboard shouldn't have harmed anything.

                        If it was the power, it may be that computer didn't automatically start up again. Some have a setting that lets you choose what to do when power is returned. It could also be corrupted as a result of not being shut down properly.

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                        • provelsP
                          provels
                          last edited by provels

                          @bigjess007 Here's what we can try to find the IP address of the Asus wireless router. Look at the label on the Asus and write down the MAC address if it's there (it will be in hex format, looking something similar to 00-15-5d-00-14-30 or 00:15:5d:00:14:30).

                          Then open up a command window like you did to get the IP address info you earlier posted to Imgur. This can be done on any connected computer. We know the Virtualbox computer is 192.168.10.111, so hopefully the rest of the network is also 192.168.10.xxx.

                          Type ping 192.168.10.255 and hit enter. It will ping 4 times and end.

                          Then type arp -a and hit enter. It should return the IP and MAC addresses of all network connected devices.

                          Match up the MAC address of the Asus to the display and note the IP address associated with it. For example, the first entry in mine is my PF and the second and third are my 2 wireless access points.
                          fd3ccdc5-3b34-4a39-b001-bc2b3fde5b6b-image.png
                          Then open a browser and try to connect to either
                          http://<the Asus IP address> or
                          https://<the Asus IP address>

                          If we're lucky you'll see a login prompt somewhat like this. If the fields are pre-filled, hit Sign In or try the DD-WRT login info you have. Fingers crossed. If you can't determine which MAC belongs to the Asus, post a screen cap like you did earlier and maybe we can muddle through. :)
                          0123a391-5d00-4f2c-b017-c0b6953f1e71-image.png

                          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)

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                          • provelsP
                            provels
                            last edited by

                            Wonder how this all turned out.

                            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)

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                            • stephenw10S
                              stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                              last edited by

                              Yeah. Tough situation. Hope they were able to get everything under control.

                              Steve

                              provelsP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • provelsP
                                provels @stephenw10
                                last edited by

                                @stephenw10 Maybe I should doc my network for my heirs? Nah. They'll just recycle it anyway. LOL

                                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)

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                                • stephenw10S
                                  stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                  last edited by

                                  I mean I'm not sure I'd want to burden anyone with a lot of the obsolete junk I have. 😉

                                  Makes you think though....

                                  Steve

                                  provelsP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • provelsP
                                    provels @stephenw10
                                    last edited by provels

                                    @stephenw10 Don't get me started. I'll just leave instructions to hit everything with a hammer. Let me tell you about My Everex Cube, circa 1992, Full-house, 64MB RAM, 2! 2GB SCSI drives and SCSI CD, 486DX2-66 upgrade!, $10,000 new... Hey, where ya going...? LOL

                                    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)

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