Official Realtek Driver Binary 1.95 For 2.4.4 Release
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@Cybermaze - Small update, using multiple client streams into a pfSense iperf3 server yields similar results as a single stream of ~400-450Mbps.
However, I noticed when using multiple client streams when pfSense is the client and another device is the server, I can get steady 800Mbps throughput, much closer to theoretical 1000Mbps max line speed. Interesting...I'll look into running multiple iperf servers simultaneously as well, thanks @stephenw10.
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Finally got around to adding some gigabit Intel NICs to the build, and sure enough I can easily obtain 960+ Mbps both to the firewall (to see WAN theoretical max speed) and through the firewall. So definitely something funky going on with the onboard Realtek NIC, like @griffo mentioned, despite using the latest drivers v1.96.04 from Realtek. Not crucial to fix I guess, but still interesting to note for others who may have similar issues in the future.
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@rico said in Official Realtek Driver Binary 1.95 For 2.4.4 Release:
Here you go: rtl_bsd12.1_drv_v196.04.zip
-Rico
Hi, I would like to know if this driver also works on the 2.5.0 RC that is about to come out.
Thank you. -
As jimp said in the other thread in 2.5 the FreeBSD package for this is in our repo. So you can simply do this at the command line:
pkg install realtek-re-kmod
then
echo 'if_re_load="YES"' >> /boot/loader.conf.local
Then reboot and check the boot logs for output from the new driver loading like:
re0: <Realtek PCIe GbE Family Controller> port 0x1000-0x10ff mem 0xf7a00000-0xf7a00fff,0xf7900000-0xf7903fff irq 16 at device 0.0 on pci1 re0: Using Memory Mapping! re0: Using 1 MSI-X message re0: ASPM disabled re0: version:1.96.04 re0: Ethernet address: 00:0d:b9:37:30:10
Steve
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@stephenw10
Ok thanks. -
@stephenw10 said in Official Realtek Driver Binary 1.95 For 2.4.4 Release:
As jimp said in the other thread in 2.5 the FreeBSD package for this is in our repo. So you can simply do this at the command line:
pkg install realtek-re-kmod
then
echo 'if_re_load="YES"' >> /boot/loader.conf.local
Then reboot and check the boot logs for output from the new driver loading like:
re0: <Realtek PCIe GbE Family Controller> port 0x1000-0x10ff mem 0xf7a00000-0xf7a00fff,0xf7900000-0xf7903fff irq 16 at device 0.0 on pci1 re0: Using Memory Mapping! re0: Using 1 MSI-X message re0: ASPM disabled re0: version:1.96.04 re0: Ethernet address: 00:0d:b9:37:30:10
Steve
I was forgetting to ask you something, in your opinion it is better to first remove the old driver for realtek that I had installed for 2.4.5, then update to 2.5.0 and finally install the new driver with the procedure you wrote above or I can do upgrade to 2.5.0 and then overwrite the old driver with the new one? Thank you.
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I would removed any 2.4.X binaries you have uploaded first. They won't load in 2.5 anyway.
Steve
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@mikekoke said in Official Realtek Driver Binary 1.95 For 2.4.4 Release:
@rico said in Official Realtek Driver Binary 1.95 For 2.4.4 Release:
Here you go: rtl_bsd12.1_drv_v196.04.zip
-Rico
Hi, I would like to know if this driver also works on the 2.5.0 RC that is about to come out.
Thank you.Thanks. It worked easily for me.
PfSense 2.5.0-RELEASE (amd64)
built on Tue Feb 16 08:56:29 EST 2021
FreeBSD 12.2-STABLE -
@networkingmicrobe I have the same problem with the built-in RTL8168. In Windows driver, there's an option "Gigabit lite" that is to set to ON by default which reduces its speed to half. I suspect that might be be the default settting on the NIC. Not sure if there's an option to turn it OFF in pfSense.
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@mikekoke said in Official Realtek Driver Binary 1.95 For 2.4.4 Release:
@stephenw10 said in Official Realtek Driver Binary 1.95 For 2.4.4 Release:
As jimp said in the other thread in 2.5 the FreeBSD package for this is in our repo. So you can simply do this at the command line:
pkg install realtek-re-kmod
then
echo 'if_re_load="YES"' >> /boot/loader.conf.local
Then reboot and check the boot logs for output from the new driver loading like:
re0: <Realtek PCIe GbE Family Controller> port 0x1000-0x10ff mem 0xf7a00000-0xf7a00fff,0xf7900000-0xf7903fff irq 16 at device 0.0 on pci1 re0: Using Memory Mapping! re0: Using 1 MSI-X message re0: ASPM disabled re0: version:1.96.04 re0: Ethernet address: 00:0d:b9:37:30:10
Steve
I was forgetting to ask you something, in your opinion it is better to first remove the old driver for realtek that I had installed for 2.4.5, then update to 2.5.0 and finally install the new driver with the procedure you wrote above or I can do upgrade to 2.5.0 and then overwrite the old driver with the new one? Thank you.
Hi thread, long time no see! So I recently upgraded from 2.4.5 to 2.5.1 and started getting the dreaded watchdog timeout errors again after a couple of days, would completely hang my connection and force me offline. I noticed that the Realtek driver wasn't loading as before and can confirm that the above simple (pkg install) fix seemed to work for me. The key info to confirm that the driver is loaded is to run the
kldstat
command and also check the boot logs for the version line as shown above. Many thanks for sharing, fingers crossed this post might help someone else running crappy Realtek hardware on pfSense. -
Just an update for anyone reading this old thread for older releases, there are much simpler instructions that worked for me on the 2.5.1 release, I now recommend avoiding any messy compilation and upload of drivers and just using the instructions here:
https://forum.netgate.com/topic/135850/official-realtek-driver-binary-1-95-for-2-4-4-release/168
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@m4nf47
same here, pkg remove and then install
tho i had to add the following to /boot/loader.conf
if_re_load="YES"
if_re_name="/boot/modules/if_re.ko" -
Version 1.96.04 for FreeBSD 13, if needed.
https://github.com/anignatev/if_re
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I'm running into this issue on PFSense 2.6. Does anyone have a working driver?
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Do this:
pkg add https://pkg.freebsd.org/FreeBSD:12:amd64/latest/All/realtek-re-kmod-197.00.pkg
Then do:
echo 'if_re_load="YES"' >> /boot/loader.conf.local echo 'if_re_name="/boot/modules/if_re.ko"' >> /boot/loader.conf.local
Then reboot. Make sure it reports the new driver in the boot log.
Steve
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@j3roen
Loading and installing over the Webgui
Console or log in via SSHpkg add https://pkg.freebsd.org/FreeBSD:12:amd64/latest/All/realtek-re-kmod-197.00.pkg pkg install -f -y realtek-re-kmod-197.00.pkg
/boot/loader.conf.local
loader.conf.local and entries must be created by yourselfif_re_load=“YES” if_re_name="/boot/modules/if_re.ko"
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You only need the 'pkg add' command to install it.
You don't need to do anything with the existing module if you have specified the path to the alternative module in the _name variable.
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Thanks all! :)
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I am having this same issue, but the repository listed above is giving me a 403 forbidden error. I am on pfSense 2.6 and just set up a new Zimaboard to use for a firewall. My WAN internet connection has dropped multiple times over the last 24 hours.
EDIT: I used
pkg add https://pkg.freebsd.org/FreeBSD:12:amd64/quarterly/All/realtek-re-kmod-197.00.pkg
2nd Edit: Once I installed this package the firewall behaved even worse. I went back in after a reboot and unchecked the option to disable hardware checksum offload. Rebooted again. Watching now to see if things are stable. I had checked this option to disable the offload as an attempt to fix the problem, before loading the driver.
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3rd Update: The driver didn't fix the problem. The WAN connection went down again in less than 24 hours. The LAN would still ping, but the web GUI would not load. I have pulled the Zimaboard out of service for now. The next attempt will be with a PCIe dual Intel NIC on the Zimaboard. This isn't really ideal but I am going to give it a shot.