Announcing pfSense plus
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Will review prices for my sg 3100 when avail
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It's my understanding that if you own a Netgate appliance, plus is free.
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Even if yet was announced, that there will be a no-charge path for home and lab use, I really hope that will be the way we are going in the next years.
I am also ready to pay for a great software for my private-home-network. It is my hobby, I love PFSense, but the costs -IF in the future there will be a charge for privat users- must be adequate. Like 5$ per month would be fair in my opinion.
But if the version, even for home user would for example be limited to 50 IP adresses (like Sophos) or a charge of XXX$ or XXXX$ would be billed annualy, you would lose many private folks.
And nowadays, especially with smart-home, guest-wifi for your friends, you hit the 50 IP adresses fast.Just that as general thought for your future-briefings.
At the moment it looks great: Plus version, without charge for privat & lab use! Thumbs up!
But IF in the next years you are going to charge the home users, pls keep it in a fair way, to allow the nerds, like me, using that great project. Would be really sad, to move to another platform. -
@jeremy11one said in Announcing pfSense plus:
I think it's important for everyone to know about these 2 things from the FAQ page:***Q: So there are no more new releases from the project?
A: That is really up to how the project progresses itself, separate and distinct from Netgate... If the community chooses to progress feature set, testing, documentation, and release packaging, there will obviously be progression beyond Release 2.5.Q: Is pfSense Plus open source?
A: No. pfSense Plus is closed source.One of the big benefits of pfSense was that it is open source. Even though the upgrade to pfSense Plus is expected to be free for home users, I'm torn about whether to "upgrade" to the newer closed source version or stay with the open source CE version.
I have a "Bad feeling" about these statement too.
While i do understand Netgate is a buisiness.
I can't stop feeling like CE is going to be "abandoned" / "Left as is".I'm not a developer, and have tried to "pay back" by helping out on the forum instead.
But who in the community can lift the task of improving CE ?
Isn't all the "core developers" with Netgate ?/Bingo
Ps:
If i were a Whale , i'd think of this sentence:
"Goodbye and thanx for all the fish" -
pfSense is going closed source in the mid/long run? That is really the worst thing that could happen. :-(
-Rico
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I'm worried, to say at least..
I don't know about you, so I'll speak about me.The EOL from the devices is from 1 to 3 years..
When I decided to support Netgate by buying one appliance, I thought that I would be supporting an OSS project so they could stay an OSS.
Based on that, I understand the reason why the appliances are expensive.Is it possible to ask Netgate, to extend the EOL period, for people like me, who support Netgate and the OSS?
I ask to extend to EOL period, because this is a surprise for us, and fast like this? I mean, next month to leave OSS and become a closed source..
This is not what I was supporting for when I bought my appliance.Please, think about people that bought your appliances, at least double down the EOL period for existing devices, to give us something in the return.
I really like, support, use and recommend Netgate.. Please, don't get me wrong.
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@mcury Sorry, I don't I think I fully understand your question. Why would you want EOL extended? I'll do my best to answer, just want to understand the question.
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@dennis_s Sorry, English is not my 1st language.
If you didn't understand, I'll try to simplify in a single question.If I decide to install FE version, which is closed source, I'll be totally dependent of Netgate for updates, patches and security fixes.
Will there be updates, patches and security fixes for EOL devices that install FE version?
Will I be able to install the latest CE version in my device in case the 1st question's answer is NO?Regarding my previous post, I thought that I would be supporting an OSS project so they could stay an OSS while I could just use my own hardware, I don't think that is fair to us.
So, that's why I'm asking something in return. -
@mcury I apologize if I'm wrong, but I suspect you're confusing "end of life" for the hardware with "no more software updates" for pfSense on that device. https://www.netgate.com/support/product-lifecycle.html as I understand it is just for the hardware. I've personally upgraded several devices on that list that are "past EOL" to 2.4.5, last fall.
I have not heard that Netgate will stop pfSense from upgrading on old hardware. Obviously at some point hardware will just be too old to run new FreeBSD versions but that's different than blocking it.
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@johnpoz said in Announcing pfSense plus:
That wording really sounds like pfsense CE could just die off..
it was bound to happen sooner or later after chris decided it was useful to have a pension-plan ;)
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closed source ... Does this mean I can no longer piss off Jimp and Garga with a new report on Redmine?
my only regret, what a shame -
@kiokoman No, you can still do that, even on closed source.
What you cant do is see the code fix .
You should also expect quicker resolution too.
This is something that must also happen on a paid project to be successful.
What is totally unclear to me is what will happen to the new generation features and the feeds that make it happen. Especially pfblockerng, snort and suricata. Far more people depend on that. compared to running at speeds @10g+. (and there is tnsr for that)
If this is lost, opnsense will be a more palatable option. -
Is there a chance that customers will have access to the source code of pfSense plus? Being able to look through the box and (often) being able to locally fix issues before handing in a bug-report is a big plus imo (For customers as well as netgate because the quality of bugreports can be better due to that). How does this all play together with GPLed parts of the software?
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@dennis_s
I have a Netgate appliance (MBT-4220) which uses CE. Will there be a migration path to pfSense plus? -
@netblues said in Announcing pfSense plus:
What is totally unclear to me is what will happen to the new generation features and the feeds that make it happen. Especially pfblockerng, snort and suricata. Far more people depend on that.
One thing people often fail to realize is that the rise of end-to-end encryption is basically a death knell for IDS packages. You can't inspect encrypted traffic unless you break the chain of trust via MITM (man-in-the-middle) interception/proxying. Already Snort and Suricata both bail on a session as soon as they see the packets are part of an HTTPS, TLS, or SSH encrypted stream. So now ask yourself how many malware payloads are served up via HTTPS either through malicious ads on web sites or file downloads. Who sends emails with attachments in the clear these days? Nobody. Everyone uses some manner of TLS with email. Even DNS traffic is beginning to move over encrypted channels (DoT and its devil child, DoH). So when you think about all of that, you begin to see how encryption is killing the effectiveness of IDS/IPS.
While this has no direct bearing on the conversation at hand, I just wanted to point out that due to the changing landscape of the Internet, the need for some packages is going to die no matter what direction pfSense takes.
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^ well stated.. And while its a tiny bit off topic with packages and +... Its still very relevant in my opinion..
Like to mention - everyone loves the FREE ssl certs anyone can get in 2 minutes if their IP resolves to a domain with ACME... This also makes it nobrainer simple for even the lamest of scriptkiddie malware pushers to have your box use https to their device via a tunnel, and trust the shit out of it - nor warnings of any kind.. Hiding whatever they might be doing from any sort of ips/ids..
The internet is changing place - and everyone wants you info... Send your dns to me - oh your company doesn't want that - well F your company and its policies.. Will just have your browser sneak their dns via a tunnel over standard ports to make it PITA for your company to even know or block..
To be honest I have no freaking idea what these people that came up with doh were thinking - my opinion is all they were thinking about is $ signs.. Think of all the money we can make with these uses sending us free money, I mean data ;)
Ad companies - oh your domains are blocked because you serve up ads.. No worry, for a very low cost we will serve up your domains via our dns.. Yeah Yeah - the users "trust" us to do all their dns ;) we can serve them anything you want to serve.. Malware - oh that will cost you just a few pennies more per hit.. No the companies can not stop us - we just bypass all their controls ;) But say they can stop if after they jump through a billion hoops, that sure some of the top players will be able to do... But the millions of smbs and ma and pop shops wont have a clue ;)
sorry got on a bit of a rant there ;)
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@bmeeks Still, some filtering is better than no filtering.
If pfsense wants to compete with e.g fortigate or sophos utm, then it needs feeds.
Professionally maintained and supported.Interesting times.
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@netblues said in Announcing pfSense plus:
@bmeeks Still, some filtering is better than no filtering.
If pfsense wants to compete with e.g fortigate or sophos utm, then it needs feeds.
Professionally maintained and supported.Interesting times.
I don't disagree with you. I would point out, though, that NGFW (Next Generation Firewall) can have a lot of differently nuanced meanings. And some of them might actually be marketing hype (translation, BS ... ).
Let's not derail this thread with this topic. If desired, we can discuss further over in the IDS/IPS sub-forum. My original post here was just to say that having Snort or Suricata is not a make-or-break thing in my opinion because of how end-to-end encryption is hiding lots of stuff from the eyes of the IDS anyway.
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@bmeeks said in Announcing pfSense plus:
@netblues said in Announcing pfSense plus:
@bmeeks Still, some filtering is better than no filtering.
If pfsense wants to compete with e.g fortigate or sophos utm, then it needs feeds.
Professionally maintained and supported.Interesting times.
I don't disagree with you. I would point out, though, that NGFW (Next Generation Firewall) can have a lot of differently nuanced meanings. And some of them might actually be marketing hype (translation, BS ... ).
Let's not derail this thread with this topic. If desired, we can discuss further over in the IDS/IPS sub-forum. My original post here was just to say that having Snort or Suricata is not a make-or-break thing in my opinion because of how end-to-end encryption is hiding lots of stuff from the eyes of the IDS anyway.
Can't seem to edit a post in this forum, so I want to follow up on my remark above about NGFW. I really meant to say UTM more so than NGFW, but they are really closely associated. My remark is not aimed at any vendor, but just refers to those concepts in general terms. End-to-end encryption is fouling up a lot of old-school network-level inspection, and is moving it instead to the endpoint clients.
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I appreciate that a no cost home/lab version will be offered, but is there any chance we can get a direct version upgrade instead of how the free TNSR offering is setup?
After initial excitement of the TNSR free tier, I decided not to install largely because of the upgrade hassle. I am definitely not a fan of having to backup, reregister, re-provision and restore my appliance for every new patch/feature.
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To the pfSense team:
Why would it be a problem for 'pfSense Plus' to be held open source like pfSense CE in regards to adding trust & confidence to the product as well as adding to security and privacy in regards to be able to look under the hood of e.g. the GUI, the backend and the various tools? -
it would be so great to have the gold membership back, only for sponsoring the CE edition / Netgate. Call it "gold sponsoring", we buy it per year (as the gold membership was).
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Back in the days when I was asked 'what is so great about pfSense?' my answers (sorted in order of importance):
- Open Source, you can trust the code 100%
- rock stable
- really nice feature set
- awesome community
Good old times...
-Rico
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Too bad, for us the USP of pfSense was the open source model, knowing there are (at least potentially) multiple and external eyes on the code.
Been supporting the project with both hardware purchases and gold subscriptions during the years. With open source gone the differentiator between our deployed SG-3100:s and the USG from UniFi is lost and we can move to a fully-integrated UniFi experience that is another closed-source-trust-the-company-running-it-relationship.Wishing you best of luck. So long and thank you for all the years!
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@rico said in Announcing pfSense plus:
2x Netgate XG-7100 | 11x Netgate SG-5100 | 6x Netgate SG-3100 | 2x Netgate SG-1100
Surely Netgate have to be nervous when someone who has over 20 devices and has been a big supporter of those is worried?
I’m only a new convert to pfSense, as of about July, but the fact it was open source was a big thing as I was fed up of hardware that had rubbish firewalls that promised lots and delivered nothing with unresponsive support that ignored requests to fix things. I did almost buy your hardware just after Christmas, but decided to wait. I’m glad I did. :(
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Just to make things clear....
Currently testing freebsd based FW's for the foreign state department here and closed source is a no go.
They have issues with the US spying on live traffic thats encrypted. So it can be done...
And I will always, on a personal level, run MiTM and not make anybody beeing able ro run anything other than the DNS provided.
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@dennis_s said in Announcing pfSense plus:
Read our latest blog which includes a FAQ to learn more about this exciting change.
I can't see anything exciting in this post... only stupid decisions.
Just my 0,02$
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I am ok with it, if there is a full free version for home use, because I don't think that those people will pay for a firewall in the first place... unless it becomes a full-fledged WiFi-router. Pls don't.
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@bob-dig said in Announcing pfSense plus:
I am ok with it, if there is a full free version for home use, because I don't think that those people will pay for a firewall in the first place... unless it becomes a full-fledged WiFi-router. Pls don't.
Free version doesn't equal OSS version and for many projects that reach out about ditching other vendors in favor of pfSense, that IS one of the - if not THE - main incentive. So while free version for home use is fine, that does nothing for planning bigger projects at the moment. And because of the "we don't know yet" throughout the FAQ/blog post in terms of 3rd party HW, licensing, costs and future of the CE version, that is an almost impossible sell at the moment for any new project that goes on right now or in the following weeks. Because no company wants a solution that will change course, get stale in the future or other fears that already have been laid out.
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as far as I am concerned
It is as informed as possible about this
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It is an impossible sell** -
I completely understand the free-to-use community being frustrated by the move to close-source a product and charge for full-featured software, but I can tell you from my years working with companies to build solutions, there are a lot of companies out there that aren't allowed to use open source anything.
I don't agree with that thinking, but it is what it is in the business world.
This may make a lot of people who aren't paying anyway stop using this platform, but this is going to open another set of doors for pfSense, ones that simply don't exist under an open source code model - and those doors are going to be willing to pay - potentially a lot of money for support and to use the software.
I'm not trying to start a huge argument here, that's just fact.
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cant agree more !
heaven and hell are two windows in the same house, or something like that
brNP
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I have chosen pfSense a few years ago to have firewalls on which I can do whatever I need. To support Netgate and the project, I have bought about 20 appliances, mostly sg-3100. On several occasions, pfSense has proven to be a perfect choice for my needs. I have been able with some lines of code to implement custom functions and to patch all the required appliances. Also, I have invested a lot of my free time to create and contribute to ansible modules to manage our pfSense fleet and was eagerly waiting for the GUI/control code separation.
Now, since sg-3100 runs on ARM, I won't be able to run pfSense CE on them. So, to keep an open-source platform, the only choice I have is to stay forever on the last pfSense FE release. The other choice would be to go close source with pfSense plus and hope for the best (no script obfuscation ever, no closed source patches on binaries I may need to patch and build). It looks like two dead-ends to me. And I feel fooled: it wouldn't have happened to me if I hadn't decided to support Netgate and become a customer.
Anyway, I saw the argument "pfSense plus is something more, not less" multiple times on Reddit. Given my situation, I disagree: dropping pfSense FE and the open-source model for customers is definitly something less.
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New blog post concerning these changes:
https://www.netgate.com/blog/pfsense-plus-pfsense-ce-dev-insights-direction.html
One change I noticed is the availability of pfSense + for non-Netgate hardware is now late 2021. I'm not sure if that is an actual change in Netgate's internal planning or just the author being careful to not over promise.
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@jwj Can't edit so...
This is from the FAQ (as of 1-27-21):
"Today, pfSense Plus 21.02 is only available on Netgate appliances, AWS, and Azure platforms.
We plan to make pfSense Plus available for use on 3rd party hardware and select virtual machines by June 2021, if not sooner.
There will be a no charge path for home and lab use and a chargeable version for commercial use."
and in today's blog:
"The good news is that we also plan to make pfSense Plus available to work on non-Netgate hardware in late 2021, not just our appliances, and we plan to make the licensing of pfSense Plus completely free for home, hobby, and lab use."
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@jwj
there is "only" a new gui written on Go and clixon May or September it's not important for me. 2.6CE is still planned
In the past, a release was made “when it’s ready” <- (he is stealing Jimp's motto )
There will be CE releases after 2.6, but unlike Plus, they’ll be done when they’re ready, not on a regular cadence.
Scott Long ( welcome ) was reassuring somehow -
@kiokoman said in Announcing pfSense plus:
There will be CE releases after 2.6, but unlike Plus, they’ll be done when they’re ready, not on a regular cadence.
Works for Debian perfect ;)
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What's the benefit for the community of these changes exactly?
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I installed pfSense for a friend at his home. However he also runs 2 businesses from his home. How would the new licensing apply to him?
Will he be able to upgrade to pfSense+ without paying (since it's his home)? Or would he have to buy a pfSense+ licence given that he runs 2 businesses from his home?