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    Unable to update repository pfSense

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General pfSense Questions
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    • stephenw10S
      stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
      last edited by

      Hmm, weird. Hard to imagine what could have caused that for pfSense but not clients behind it. 🤔

      E 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • E
        elvisimprsntr @stephenw10
        last edited by elvisimprsntr

        @stephenw10

        When I restart both kea-dhcp4 and unbound the problem persists.

        When I head to Status -> Interfaces -> Click on WAN Release then Renew, everything starts working again.

        Not sure if this error is related when pfSense is trying to get an IP address from my fiber modem, which is in DHCP passthrough mode.

        Feb  9 13:45:55 pfSense dhclient[9122]: unknown dhcp option value 0x7d
        
        
        Feb  9 13:45:55 pfSense dhclient[9122]: DHCPREQUEST on igc0 to 192.168.1.254 port 67
        Feb  9 13:45:55 pfSense dhclient[9122]: DHCPACK from 192.168.1.254
        Feb  9 13:45:55 pfSense dhclient[9122]: unknown dhcp option value 0x7d
        Feb  9 13:45:55 pfSense dhclient[11337]: RENEW
        Feb  9 13:45:55 pfSense dhclient[12245]: Creating resolv.conf
        Feb  9 13:45:55 pfSense dhclient[9122]: bound to [redacted] -- renewal in 300 seconds.
        

        The behavior almost seems like it is losing a WAN route.

        I piped the following script to a log file while it is working.

        Will run again once symptoms reoccur.

        #!/bin/sh
        
        ifconfig igc0
        netstat -rWn
        cat /var/db/dhclient.leases.igc0
        
        

        What other logs should I comb through for any evidence?

        patient0P 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • patient0P
          patient0 @elvisimprsntr
          last edited by

          @elvisimprsntr said in Unable to update repository pfSense:

          Feb 9 13:45:55 pfSense dhclient[9122]: unknown dhcp option value 0x7d

          There exists a bug report for FreeBSD regarding this error: https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=281361

          Seems to be about unknown DHCP options send from upstream, more annoying then a real issue.

          E GertjanG 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • E
            elvisimprsntr @patient0
            last edited by

            @patient0 said in Unable to update repository pfSense:

            Seems to be about unknown DHCP options send from upstream, more annoying then a real issue.

            Unless it is somehow affecting KEA

            patient0P 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • patient0P
              patient0 @elvisimprsntr
              last edited by

              @elvisimprsntr said in Unable to update repository pfSense:

              Unless it is somehow affecting KEA

              Can't see how, two different applications on different interfaces, dhclient and KEA. But then it's computers and nothing is impossible.

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

                Yup Kea and Unbound are not dhclient so that's probably unrelated.

                Is unbound actually starting correctly?

                @elvisimprsntr said in Unable to update repository pfSense:

                The behavior almost seems like it is losing a WAN route.

                Is it actually losing a route? Is there a default route in the routing table? Can pfSense still ping out by IP address?

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • GertjanG
                  Gertjan @patient0
                  last edited by Gertjan

                  @patient0 said in Unable to update repository pfSense:

                  Feb 9 13:45:55 pfSense dhclient[9122]: unknown dhcp option value 0x7d
                  

                  There exists a bug report for FreeBSD regarding this error: https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=281361

                  Seems to be about unknown DHCP options send from upstream, more annoying then a real issue.

                  So shown on "bugs.freebsd.org" :

                  The option in question is better known as 'DHCP Option 125' -- used for 'Vendor Specific Information'

                  This options comes from an upstream DHCP (ISP ?!), server that gives this 'extra' option the the DHCP client (pfSense), who didn't asked for it. So, do panic, it will discarded.
                  But a log line will tell the admin it did so. Not an error at all, imho, this is something between an INFO and WARNING messages, not an error.

                  Because we're all networks admins, why not telling us what this option is all about ?
                  Easy to find out (we have pfSense, remember ?!) :

                  The settings (I presume none of them needs any introduction) :

                  9cbdc76a-2320-485c-b7a8-3dc98e83a687-image.png

                  and hit the start button.
                  ( in short : WAN interface, DHCP is UDP, and the ports are 67 and 68 - and we want all the details)

                  After after a while (and you can know upfront when it will happen) :
                  The device (pfSense DHCP client) sends out a lease request :

                  16:05:06.715857 a4:bb:6d:ba:16:a1 > 90:ec:77:29:39:2c, ethertype IPv4 (0x0800), length 342: (tos 0x0, ttl 128, id 31136, offset 0, flags [none], proto UDP (17), length 328)
                      192.168.1.6.68 > 192.168.1.1.67: [udp sum ok] BOOTP/DHCP, Request from a4:bb:6d:ba:16:a1, length 300, xid 0x7dd77758, Flags [none] (0x0000)
                  	  Client-IP 192.168.1.6
                  	  Client-Ethernet-Address a4:bb:6d:ba:16:a1
                  	  Vendor-rfc1048 Extensions
                  	    Magic Cookie 0x63825363
                  	    DHCP-Message (53), length 1: Request
                  	    Client-ID (61), length 7: ether a4:bb:6d:ba:16:a1
                  	    Hostname (12), length 7: "Gauche2"
                  	    FQDN (81), length 10: "Gauche2"
                  	    Vendor-Class (60), length 8: "MSFT 5.0"
                  	    Parameter-Request (55), length 14: 
                  	      Subnet-Mask (1), Default-Gateway (3), Domain-Name-Server (6), Domain-Name (15)
                  	      Router-Discovery (31), Static-Route (33), Vendor-Option (43), Netbios-Name-Server (44)
                  	      Netbios-Node (46), Netbios-Scope (47), Unknown (119), Classless-Static-Route (121)
                  	      Classless-Static-Route-Microsoft (249), Unknown (252)
                  

                  Take note of the somewhat standard DHCP options 1,3,6,15,31,33,44,46,47,119,121.
                  You saw the 43 ? 119 ? 252 ?

                  a couple of ms later you'll see the answer from the server :

                  16:05:06.722112 90:ec:77:29:39:2c > a4:bb:6d:ba:16:a1, ethertype IPv4 (0x0800), length 359: (tos 0x10, ttl 128, id 0, offset 0, flags [DF], proto UDP (17), length 345)
                      192.168.1.1.67 > 192.168.1.6.68: [udp sum ok] BOOTP/DHCP, Reply, length 317, xid 0x7dd77758, Flags [none] (0x0000)
                  	  Client-IP 192.168.1.6
                  	  Your-IP 192.168.1.6
                  	  Client-Ethernet-Address a4:bb:6d:ba:16:a1
                  	  Vendor-rfc1048 Extensions
                  	    Magic Cookie 0x63825363
                  	    DHCP-Message (53), length 1: ACK
                  	    Subnet-Mask (1), length 4: 255.255.255.0
                  	    Default-Gateway (3), length 4: 192.168.1.1
                  	    Domain-Name-Server (6), length 4: 192.168.1.1
                  	    Domain-Name (15), length 20: "bhf.tld"
                  	    Vendor-Option (43), length 6: 1.4.192.168.1.6
                  	    Lease-Time (51), length 4: 21600
                  	    Server-ID (54), length 4: 192.168.1.1
                  	    FQDN (81), length 11: [N] "gauche2."
                  

                  So the DHCP server answered with option 1,3,6,15,43 (!) and 81.
                  So some requested option from the client went unanswered.
                  Other options, like 81 and 54 are sent without being asked for.
                  Option 51 : the lease time, was unasked, but was given anyway ^^

                  Btw : I faked somewhat the example, as the server is here pfSEnse, and the client one of my LAN DHCP clients, a MS PC. hence the typical MS option requests.
                  I could stop the pfSense WAN DHCOP client lease, but that would 'break' my Internet connection, and I've a load of colleagues using it right now ...

                  For every option, as these are extremely well documented, go and look them up.

                  Now, your turn : what did you see ?

                  Btw : my Kea pfSEnse server offers option 43, or by default, pfSense doesn't know about it.

                  So I had to do this : https://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/15321 as 'extra' the option '43' is very known when you use Unifi equipment.

                  No "help me" PM's please. Use the forum, the community will thank you.
                  Edit : and where are the logs ??

                  E 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • E
                    elvisimprsntr @Gertjan
                    last edited by elvisimprsntr

                    @Gertjan said in Unable to update repository pfSense:

                    Now, your turn : what did you see ?

                    Kit:

                    • ATT NVG599 RG in passthrough mode
                    • Protectli FW4C running 2.7.2 with all the latest patches.

                    This is what I captured

                    16:47:18.056463 64:62:66:21:95:XX > d4:04:cd:83:e9:XX, ethertype IPv4 (0x0800), length 342: (tos 0x10, ttl 128, id 59801, offset 0, flags [none], proto UDP (17), length 328)
                        69.111.183.XX  > 192.168.1.254.67: [udp sum ok] BOOTP/DHCP, Request from 64:62:66:21:95:XX, length 300, xid 0x60716ba8, Flags [none] (0x0000)
                    	  Client-IP 69.111.183.XX
                    	  Client-Ethernet-Address 64:62:66:21:95:XX
                    	  Vendor-rfc1048 Extensions
                    	    Magic Cookie 0x63825363
                    	    DHCP-Message (53), length 1: Request
                    	    Client-ID (61), length 7: ether 64:62:66:21:95:XX
                    	    Hostname (12), length 7: "pfSense"
                    	    Parameter-Request (55), length 10: 
                    	      Subnet-Mask (1), BR (28), Time-Zone (2), Classless-Static-Route (121)
                    	      Default-Gateway (3), Domain-Name (15), Domain-Name-Server (6), Hostname (12)
                    	      Unknown (119), MTU (26)
                    16:47:18.098217 d4:04:cd:83:e9:XX > 64:62:66:21:95:XX, ethertype IPv4 (0x0800), length 382: (tos 0x0, ttl 64, id 0, offset 0, flags [DF], proto UDP (17), length 368)
                        192.168.1.254.67 > 69.111.183.XX: [udp sum ok] BOOTP/DHCP, Reply, length 340, xid 0x60716ba8, Flags [none] (0x0000)
                    	  Client-IP 69.111.183.XX
                    	  Your-IP 69.111.183.XX
                    	  Client-Ethernet-Address 64:62:66:21:95:XX
                    	  Vendor-rfc1048 Extensions
                    	    Magic Cookie 0x63825363
                    	    DHCP-Message (53), length 1: ACK
                    	    Server-ID (54), length 4: 192.168.1.254
                    	    Lease-Time (51), length 4: 600
                    	    RN (58), length 4: 300
                    	    RB (59), length 4: 525
                    	    Subnet-Mask (1), length 4: 255.255.252.0
                    	    Default-Gateway (3), length 4: 69.111.180.1
                    	    Domain-Name (15), length 12: "attlocal.net"
                    	    Domain-Name-Server (6), length 4: 192.168.1.254
                    	    Unknown (125), length 38: 0,3561,8452,1584,12337,17716,13829,3890,13107,12593,14128,14642,14643,12600,13622,1542,20054,18229,14649
                    
                    
                    GertjanG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • GertjanG
                      Gertjan @elvisimprsntr
                      last edited by Gertjan

                      @elvisimprsntr

                      I check first :
                      69.111.183.xx is your pfSense WAN IP and 192.168.1.254 is the DHCP server ?
                      I guess so.... so your DHCP server is nearby, like feet or so away - and you don't control it ?

                      Maybe its normal, but a RFC1918 IP DHCP server handing over public IP addresses, feels strange to me.
                      IPv4 leases of 600 seconds ... wow.

                      edit : oh wait, let me guess : you have a modem ISP device ?

                      Funny : the requesting DHCP client (pfSense) is asking for a option "119" but the packet (pfSense) capture decoding doesn't' know about it.

                      I saw the "125" DHCP server answer.
                      If you know the name of your ISP, and their 'end user device' you can probably find out what it wants / does / means.
                      ( and don't be surprised if they can't answer you neither ^^ )

                      No "help me" PM's please. Use the forum, the community will thank you.
                      Edit : and where are the logs ??

                      E 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • E
                        elvisimprsntr @Gertjan
                        last edited by elvisimprsntr

                        @Gertjan

                        • 69.111.183.xx is my public IP assigned to pfSense

                        • 192.168.1.254 is the IP of the NVG599 and built in DHCP server.

                        • 600 seconds is the default lease time in the NVG599

                        Screenshot 2025-02-11 at 4.35.18 PM.png

                        GertjanG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • GertjanG
                          Gertjan @elvisimprsntr
                          last edited by

                          @elvisimprsntr

                          Ok, thanks for the details.
                          Your "NVG599" seems to be to a DHCP-relay, so it re transmits to the real DHCP server, somewhere in the ISP network.
                          Anyway, the DHCP WAN seems fine and not a cause of your issue.

                          No "help me" PM's please. Use the forum, the community will thank you.
                          Edit : and where are the logs ??

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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