Looking for pfsense compatible 2500Mbps PCIE RJ45 NIC
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Need 2500Mbps NIC for PICEx1 slot
I found this online but wanted to know if pfsense has compatible drivers for it.
If not, does anyone have any suggestions?
https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B07Y2GWVB8/ref=cm_sw_r_sms_apa_i_PZ2NEbJ9A85DH
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@boogz411 If that's using the RTL8125 chipset it's not yet supported in FreeBSD and thus pfSense best I can find.
If you just want a single port as fast as possible in a x1 slot use a riser cable on any 10Gbps (or whatever) NIC that is supported. You won't get full speed but you could get 2.5Gbps I expect.
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Can I ask what the use case is for needing 2.5gbps rather than 10gbps that is way more common on mature.
2.5gbps is newer tech so don’t expect faster 10gbps cards to automatically sync up at 2.5 or 5gbps. -
There are a handful of new cablemodems coming out with a single 2.5gbps interface.. I myself will be testing one as soon as it gets here..
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This post is deleted! -
Here's what I'm looking to achieve.
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@chpalmer Thanks, is that 2.5gbps on the WAN or LAN side? Is this intended for folks bonding 2*1gbps services? I'd be interested in reading more - can you link to the modem you refer to please?
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https://www.go2mhz.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/MB8611-DataSheet-MHZ_4-20.pdf
https://zoom.net/documents/news/MB8611-CableLabs-Release-Dec2019.pdf Same modem but on the Zoomtel letterhead..
Edit- These as well. Sercomm DM1000, Netgear CBR750 and Technicolor CVA4003
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Yeah there are a few ISPs offering 1500Mbps services where the modem link is at 2.5G.
The only solution I have seen is to use a Broadcom NIC with custom firmware and a patched driver. Or get a switch that can link at 2.5G and 10G but that's an expensive option.From the diagram it looks like you're already planning use a Broadcom NIC for the link to the modem. Just use a 10G NIC to link to the switch. As has been said 2.5G will just give you problems and you don't need it there.
Steve
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The Intel X550 supports NBASE-T in Linux and seemingly does in BSD now, although it shows as “unknown” in the pfSense UI. I have been using the X550 with no issues since 2016, although only at 1G/10G speeds.
I started a thread here: https://forum.netgate.com/topic/146913/nbase-t-support-for-intel-x550/20 and @WanTime seemingly saw 2.5Gbps throughput even if the link speed shows as “unknown” in the UI.
I plan on getting a MB8611 or CBR750 as soon as they are available. I have the X550 going into a 10Gbps switch, and it works great. Hoping to get a little extra parallel performance since Comcast overprovisions their gigabit to 1.2Gbps.
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@q54e3w with 2.5g I can reuse my existing wires and the NIC cards are chipper that the 10gb.
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@palapaquete said in Looking for pfsense compatible 2500Mbps PCIE RJ45 NIC:
@q54e3w with 2.5g I can reuse my existing wires and the NIC cards are chipper that the 10gb.
Most Cat6E offers 10gbe speed. So unless you have very bad cabling then I dont get why 2,5gbs is worth it?
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I think your mean CAT5e? Which is probably what @q54e3w has installed. Though it would not surprised me to find that could not pass 10GbE.
I'm not sure 2.5GbE cards are actually cheaper. Not those that actually work. Not yet at least.
Steve
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Just saw this one (Realtek though ...)
https://www.cnx-software.com/2020/06/18/odroid-h2-plus-sbc-gets-upgraded-to-celeron-j4115-processor-2-5gbe/
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via RTL8125B chipset
I would not hold your breath on that.
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max speed for cat5 is 100Mbs
max speed for cat5e is 1Gbs
max speed for cat6 is 10Gbsyou need cat6 to be able to go at 2,5Gbs
cable are now so cheap that there is no reason to buy cat5e instead of cat6 or cat6a on amazon -
That's the rated speeds but in reality you can usually get Gigabit over cat5 especially on a short run.
I've never tried putting 10GbE down Cat5e but it would not surprise me if it worked in some cases. I certainly wouldn't rely on that though.
Cable is cheap indeed but replacing it when it's already run in your building is not (often).
Steve
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i don't think it's possible, there isn't a big difference between cat5 and cat5e, only less crosstalk/noise reduction but they both perform up to 100mhz so it's possible that a cat5 can get Gigabit but for 10Gbe you need cable that can go up to at least 250Mhz, with a patch of 15cm of cat5e i was unable to connect my 10Gbps switch to my intel x550
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Well I won't argue with a real test.
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I say from experience, even a 1m Cat5e patch, spoils the 10Gig
this physical design depends on high frequency behavior
(shields, spacers in the cable, etc)