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    Setting up a VLAN with pfSense, Ubiquiti, and ESXi

    L2/Switching/VLANs
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    • M
      marvosa @pfSenseUser78
      last edited by

      @pfSenseUser78 Then I'd go with the 2nd set of rules I posted. They'll be more streamlined for your use case.

      P 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • P
        pfSenseUser78 @marvosa
        last edited by pfSenseUser78

        @marvosa Ok. In the second setup you state "Alias for DNS servers"; I'm not sure what that means. Would I be putting in the 172.x.x.x addresses or am I creating something else?

        Thanks!

        Edit: Ok, found where to make the alias. Trying now.

        M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • P
          pfSenseUser78 @marvosa
          last edited by

          @marvosa So like this?

          Firewall 34.png

          (I think I've got this correct)

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          • M
            marvosa @pfSenseUser78
            last edited by marvosa

            @pfSenseUser78 Edited

            I first said yes, but the looked at your rules again...hold on

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            • P
              pfSenseUser78 @marvosa
              last edited by pfSenseUser78

              @marvosa SSH is enabled. I created the port alias but I can't figure out how to apply that to the second firewall rule. It doesn't appear in the list of ports to block.

              Edit: Found it here: https://docs.netgate.com/pfsense/en/latest/book/firewall/aliases.html

              Testing now!

              M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • M
                marvosa @pfSenseUser78
                last edited by

                @pfSenseUser78 The last rule should be

                Protocol = any
                Source = VL90_IOT net
                Destination = Invert match rfc1918 alias

                P DerelictD 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • P
                  pfSenseUser78 @marvosa
                  last edited by

                  @marvosa Fixed.

                  When I join that network with my laptop I connect and get an IP. I cannot ping 8.8.8.8 or 1.0.0.1 nor can I ping the internal DNS servers (172.16.x.x). If I try to load a website nothing happens.

                  Not sure where I'm going wrong - is there anything else I can post that might help? I'll continue to google and see if I can find anything myself.

                  M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • M
                    marvosa @pfSenseUser78
                    last edited by

                    @pfSenseUser78 Port your new rules.

                    P 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • P
                      pfSenseUser78 @marvosa
                      last edited by pfSenseUser78

                      @marvosa

                      Firewall 55.png

                      "InternalDNS" is the IP addresses of the two internal IP addresses (172.16.x.x) - devices on VLAN90 are assigned a 192.168.90.x IP address
                      "pfSenseAccess" is ports 20 and 80
                      "rfc1918" is 10.0.0.0/8, 172.16.0.0., 192.168.0.0/16

                      M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • M
                        marvosa @pfSenseUser78
                        last edited by marvosa

                        • @pfSenseUser78 You left off the mask on the 2nd range in your alias, but I'm guessing it was just a typo... as your rfc1918 alias should have 10.0.0.0/8, 172.16.0.0/12 and 192.168.0.0.16. Can you post a screenshot of your alias?

                        • You are unable to ping your DNS server's because the DNS rule is only allowing TCP/UDP traffic destined to your DNS servers on port 53.

                        • After re-examining your DNS rule, the source port should be any. Remove that 53.

                        Things should start working after that.

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                        • DerelictD
                          Derelict LAYER 8 Netgate @marvosa
                          last edited by

                          @marvosa said in Setting up a VLAN with pfSense, Ubiquiti, and ESXi:

                          Destination = Invert match rfc1918 alias

                          Awesome.

                          Try blocking to RFC1918 and then passing to any.

                          P 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • P
                            pfSenseUser78 @marvosa
                            last edited by

                            @marvosa

                            BEFORE:
                            Alias Before.png

                            AFTER:
                            Alias After.png

                            RULES:
                            Rules.png

                            Testing now.

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                            • P
                              pfSenseUser78 @marvosa
                              last edited by

                              @marvosa

                              Didn't work; I can't get any website to load. NSLookup returns an error.

                              I have several LAN firewall rules that prevent DNS from anything other than my two internal DNS servers (that, now that I know about aliases can be condensed but that's a project for another time) - could this be causing issues?

                              Thanks

                              M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • P
                                pfSenseUser78 @Derelict
                                last edited by

                                @Derelict Isn't that what I'm doing in the third rule (in one rule)?

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                                • DerelictD
                                  Derelict LAYER 8 Netgate
                                  last edited by Derelict

                                  Do not block traffic with pass rules. Block the traffic you want to block then pass anything else. For reasons. Either take my advice or don't. Plenty of smart people disagree with me. I despise the practice.

                                  In your configuration, however, if all of these conditions are true:

                                  1. The VL90_IOT clients have their DNS servers set to only 172.16.249.138 and 172.16.249.139
                                  2. 172.16.249.0/24 is another interface on the firewall
                                  3. The DNS servers have the pfSense address on that interface as their default gateway
                                  4. The DNS servers at 172.16.249.138 and 172.16.249.139 can resolve names from the internet

                                  Then the DNS servers are broken. Perhaps they themselves have a firewall or DNS server policy or configuration prohibiting them from resolving names from VL90_IOT.

                                  From a host on VL90_IOT what is the output of this command:

                                  dig @172.16.249.138 www.google.com

                                  If you don't have dig, get it.

                                  johnpozJ P 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • M
                                    marvosa @pfSenseUser78
                                    last edited by

                                    @pfSenseUser78 Ok, so the rfc1918 alias got fixed. Although, it raises the question of how the mask was left off in the first place as the system automatically adds the mask if the type is set to Network(s).

                                    The next issue to address is DNS. If you notice, there are no hits on your DNS rule, so we need to figure out where your queries are going.

                                    • Assuming there are no typos in your InternalDNS alias, re-verify your clients are using 172.16.249.138 and 172.16.249.139 for DNS.

                                    • On your InternalDNS alias, I would change the type to Host(s) instead of Network(s). It should work out the same, but at this point, you never know.

                                    • Do you have Squid or anything else configured that may be intercepting DNS queries?

                                    • Do your browsers have DNS-over-HTTPS enabled?

                                    • What firewall events are you seeing during your testing?

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                                    • DerelictD
                                      Derelict LAYER 8 Netgate
                                      last edited by

                                      @pfSenseUser78 said in Setting up a VLAN with pfSense, Ubiquiti, and ESXi:

                                      Didn't work; I can't get any website to load. NSLookup returns an error.

                                      WHAT error?

                                      Do the hosts at least get a DHCP lease?

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                                      • johnpozJ
                                        johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator @Derelict
                                        last edited by

                                        @Derelict said in Setting up a VLAN with pfSense, Ubiquiti, and ESXi:

                                        Block the traffic you want to block then pass anything else.

                                        While I think I am one of the ones that he is talking about disagreeing - we have had many discussions over the years about this practice ;)

                                        While I believe you can do the ! network as an allow rule... It is more complex setup for sure, and if your unsure of everything that is going on, and understand how a vip might cause you grief here, etc. etc. It can end up being an issue.. And it is easier to make a mistake with..

                                        So I do agree with @Derelict that explicit block(s), then allow any is the cleaner, easier to understand and less prone to issues method.. If you are having any sort of issues at all with your rules - this is the method you should utilize to get the rules working how you want..

                                        I have removed my use of the ! rfc1918 rules and have adopted the explicit reject rfc1918 above my any as cleaner method.

                                        An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools
                                        If you get confused: Listen to the Music Play
                                        Please don't Chat/PM me for help, unless mod related
                                        SG-4860 24.11 | Lab VMs 2.7.2, 24.11

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                                        • DerelictD
                                          Derelict LAYER 8 Netgate
                                          last edited by

                                          @johnpoz said in Setting up a VLAN with pfSense, Ubiquiti, and ESXi:

                                          I have removed my use of the ! rfc1918 rules and have adopted the explicit reject rfc1918 above my any as cleaner method.

                                          If it saves a single rule set it's worth it. 🎊

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • DerelictD
                                            Derelict LAYER 8 Netgate
                                            last edited by

                                            This post is deleted!
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