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    Loop rebooting issue.

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    • F
      Freedom Network @Gertjan
      last edited by

      @Gertjan Yes I check the man page it says my adapter was supported, but after I loaded the if_urtwn.ko(the kernel module that support my adapter) by kldload, it dropped into the restart loop as I described at the beginning.:( The reason that I am using pfsense is I really want to find an alternative of traditional access point. By the way, does pci-e NIC has a better support by pfsense/Freebsd?
      Thank you

      dotdashD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • stephenw10S
        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
        last edited by stephenw10

        2.4.5p1 is actually built on FreeBSD 11.3-stable but I have found modules from 11.3-release will work. So, yeah, just download and mount an ISO, extract the modules you need and copy them across. Load them at the command line to test it first before adding it loader.conf.local so you don't get stuck with an unbootable system.

        If if loads and works no problem open a feature request to have the module built as part of the pfSense image.

        Steve

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        • dotdashD
          dotdash @Freedom Network
          last edited by

          @Freedom-Network said in Loop rebooting issue.:

          The reason that I am using pfsense is I really want to find an alternative of traditional access point.

          pfSense is a great firewall, but a lousy access point. If you are looking for an open source access point, try something like OpenWRT or similar.

          F 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • F
            Freedom Network @stephenw10
            last edited by

            @stephenw10
            Thanks for your reply.
            What do you mean by "load them at the command line"? Is that "kldload xx.ko"? If it is, I tried, actually my adapter has been recognized and works well, but after I set everything up and restart to apply settings, it falls into infinity reboot. I observed the loop rebooting start right after "configure LAN interface" which is my wireless adapter that was driven by this kernel module. The solution is physically unplug the NIC, or don't load the module.
            I really want to use pfsense to build access point, I hope the supporting of wireless ap can be better and better in the future.

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            • F
              Freedom Network @dotdash
              last edited by

              @dotdash Yes I see... OpenWRT is too hard to configure than pfsense. Do you have any recommendation?

              dotdashD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • dotdashD
                dotdash @Freedom Network
                last edited by

                @Freedom-Network
                DD/Open WRT are the only ones I've tried on pc type hardware. It went similar to the old embedded/nano versions- write an image to the disk, then connect to the web gui to configure. These solutions are by nature more complex than off the shelf APs. For something easier, flash a supported off the shelf AP with xx-wrt or tomato, or look at UniFi.

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                • stephenw10S
                  stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                  last edited by

                  It's possible to use pfSense as an access point. I do. But I'm not an average user, and I do it mostly to make sure it works.
                  Wifi hardware that works in pfSense/FreeBSD is limited, 802.11n only.

                  I would argue that OpenWRT is not that difficult to learn and it much better suited to being an access point.

                  Steve

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                  • F
                    Freedom Network @stephenw10
                    last edited by

                    This post is deleted!
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                    • F
                      Freedom Network @stephenw10
                      last edited by

                      @stephenw10 It is harder than Pfsense, isn't it? By the way, Do you know if there are any pcie products that use Atheros chipset?

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                      • stephenw10S
                        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                        last edited by

                        Anything using the ath(4) driver will be PCIe. So, yes.

                        It's different to pfSense in many ways. I don't use it frequently enough to know everything I need to so the when I do need to configure an access point etc I usually Google a lot. 😉

                        Steve

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