Navigating to Buy pfSense +
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@mfld said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
@Darkk said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
@chudak said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
@Darkk said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
@joedan said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
@Darkk
I went ahead and did the same thing too as wanted to support the project. I've been using pfsense far as back to early pfdns days which is 15+ years of continuous use for my home and home lab. Long as I can continue to use my own hardware with the plus version without limits I'm ok paying for Tac Lite.Were you able to update with the new key?
I haven't received the new token yet. I am assuming it's a two part process of the order so hopefully I will receive an e-mail soon.
Are you sure this process involves a new token ?
I had to add the Support widget on my dashboard to see the new support dates so it's all good for me now.
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As others have said, it would be great to implement a license for beta testers. I think the minimum number of licenses for testing should be 4, for correct testing on both real and virtual hardware. I think there are few people willing to pay for 4 annual licenses at once for the price over 100 or... you can forget about the effectiveness of the beta program for plus version.
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I wonder how long the 23% discount is going be? Before throwing in all that money, I would like to see how this all resolves and if this will be their final solution...
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@AMG-A35 said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
I guess I'm going opnsense, its only replacing pfBlockeNG which is holding me back.
They have a community repo with AdGuard Home that can probably replace a chunk of that functionality for you.
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@w0w said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
As others have said, it would be great to implement a license for beta testers. I think the minimum number of licenses for testing should be 4, for correct testing on both real and virtual hardware. I think there are few people willing to pay for 4 annual licenses at once for the price over 100 or... you can forget about the effectiveness of the beta program for plus version.
I think the issue right now is that they don't have a way to distinguish a new NDI from an old one. Otherwise how can it be that some OEM can use one activation to activate one Home and Lab license, then image the entire disk to hundreds of devices and all these devices get to obtain a client certificate to access the update repo.
We have no portal for customers to see licences / NDI, expiry dates and revoke stuff.
The crux of the issue seems to be that at the back-end it isn't ready to handle this sort of stuff. Once they fix that they should be able to let us transfer a license to a new NDI and manage licenses.
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@Darkk said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
Actually it looks like my instance just got updated showing the new effective start and end dates. If you add the Netgate Service and Support widget on your dashboard it will show you the current support info.
It would make sense that I never received the new token as my instance is already registered with Netgate.
Mine only shows me this (pfSense+ installed on bare metal earlier this month):
It looks correct on the Netgate webpage:
It shows as registered too:
At this point I am not sure what any of it will mean over the coming days or weeks. Nothing actually shows an expiry date either.
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@w0w said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
or... you can forget about the effectiveness of the beta program for plus version.
I have been active testing pfSense + on white box and NetGate devices from alpha through beta then RC to release over the last few years. I am hard pressed to rationalize paying for the ability to continue this testing activity. As it now stands, I will place the 4100 MAX in production service and move the white box devices into deep storage and if things don't change, they will be sent off to be recycled. I will not run anything other than release on the 4100 MAX.
Sometimes things just suck!
Ted Quade
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@mfld said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
Otherwise how can it be that some OEM can use one activation to activate one Home and Lab license, then image the entire disk to hundreds of devices and all these devices get to obtain a client certificate to access the update repo.
As far as I can tell the NDI is generated from the NIC MAC addresses. It's certainly possible that some shady vendor changed the NDI generation code to reuse the exact same NDI on different boxes with different MAC addresses, but this is only speculation. Ideally the firewall instance should use an authenticated token with Netgate online ID instead of the two step registration token / NDI, but getting crypto/license management right when the code is readily available for inspection is not as simple as it may first seen.
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@RobbieTT Double check your Netgate hardware ID against the order. If it matches and still showing community support then I would put in a support ticket so they can look into it. Also on the widget there is a refresh button so give that a try.
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Bought a one-year subscription and will re-evaluate next year. Thanks to @Darkk for the discount code tip.
+1 to @Amodin's mention of Quicken's program to compensate beta testers. That may be a good path for Netgate, along with some scheme to address folks with multiple lab machines.
[Quicken] made the beta test program open to all (current users) and every year they waive an annual subscription cost based on a beta tester's participation.
My $0.02 and I don't work for Netgate nor am I an apologist for them. There's surely a group of folks on Home+Lab who provide value to Netgear as beta testers: detailed and actionable bug reports, collaborating with Netgear on debugging, etc. But it's probably well under half of the current Home+Lab userbase. Everyone else on the (formerly) free Home+Lab version is riding on the paid coattails of Netgate HW customers and TAC subscribers. Netgate has a business to run and developers to pay.
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@marcg said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
Bought a one-year subscription and will re-evaluate next year. Thanks to @Darkk for the discount code tip.
+1 to the mention from @Amodin regarding Quicken's program to compensate beta testers. That may be a good path for Netgate, along with some scheme to address folks with multiple lab machines.
[Quicken] made the beta test program open to all (current users) and every year they waive an annual subscription cost based on a beta tester's participation.
My $0.02 and I don't work for Netgate nor am I an apologist for them. There's surely a group of folks on Home+Lab who provide value to Netgear as beta testers: detailed and actionable bug reports, collaborating with Netgear on debugging, etc. But it's probably well under half of the current Home+Lab userbase. Everyone else on the (formerly) free Home+Lab version is riding on the paid coattails of Netgate HW customers and TAC subscribers. Netgate has a business to run.
Now as home+Lab users are paying for TAC-Lite, Netgate will have to formalize its beta program and find a way to continue getting this feedback.
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@chudak said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
Now as home+Lab users are paying for TAC-Lite, Netgate will have to formalize its beta program and find a way to continue getting this feedback.
I think for beta testing it should come with a beta testing license good for short period of time like 30 days which should be automatic by the software. After 30 days you'll need to update to the newest beta or revert back to CE or Plus if you have a current paid subscription. If there aren't any beta version to test then it shouldn't be an issue as everyone would be on CE or Plus.
With beta testing it shouldn't matter what Netgate Hardware ID would be as it's tied to the clock of the software. It would have to be verifiable by Netgate servers to prevent cheating.
It would be a good way to test various network cards without worrying about the hardware ID changing.
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@Darkk said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
@RobbieTT Double check your Netgate hardware ID against the order. If it matches and still showing community support then I would put in a support ticket so they can look into it. Also on the widget there is a refresh button so give that a try.
There is no Netgate ID against my order on the invoice, just the order number and the SKU. I have raised a ticket on your suggestion.
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@RobbieTT said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
@Darkk said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
@RobbieTT Double check your Netgate hardware ID against the order. If it matches and still showing community support then I would put in a support ticket so they can look into it. Also on the widget there is a refresh button so give that a try.
There is no Netgate ID against my order on the invoice, just the order number and the SKU. I have raised a ticket on your suggestion.
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3 h after, my order it's still not fulfilled and I see no update on the support widget
How do I raise a ticket?
TIA
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@Darkk said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
@chudak said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
Now as home+Lab users are paying for TAC-Lite, Netgate will have to formalize its beta program and find a way to continue getting this feedback.
I think for beta testing it should come with a beta testing license good for short period of time like 30 days which should be automatic by the software. After 30 days you'll need to update to the newest beta or revert back to CE or Plus if you have a current paid subscription. If there aren't any beta version to test then it shouldn't be an issue as everyone would be on CE or Plus.
With beta testing it shouldn't matter what Netgate Hardware ID would be as it's tied to the clock of the software. It would have to be verifiable by Netgate servers to prevent cheating.
It would be a good way to test various network cards without worrying about the hardware ID changing.
How do you in this scenario encourage/sign up more beta testers? Where is the incentive?
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@chudak said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
How do I raise a ticket?
TIA
https://portal.netgate.com
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@RobbieTT said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
https://portal.netgate.com
Thx
But I can't login or reset the password :(
But I see my subscription as active now!
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@chudak said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
Now as home+Lab users are paying for TAC-Lite, Netgate will have to formalize its beta program and find a way to continue getting this feedback.
I think those who participate in dev/beta testing and willing to pay for it will be vanishingly small.
I am an active participant in testing and own a Netgate 6100 with pfSense+ included. However, I do most of my testing on my own Supermicro 1U box. Occasionally Netgate asks me to run dev or experimental loads on my 6100, so I have to do some swapping around of which device is in a production state and which is being used for the testing.
On current plans I would require an additional paid pfSense+ subscription even though I can only actually use 1 device at a time. Put another way I would require 2 active licences even though I only have 1 WAN connection and be charged annually for this privilege. All on top the time and effort of the dev/beta work, in order to help develop the product.
Clearly this a bad deal and unless things change my contributions will cease when my current additional pfSense+ licence expires. I am far from a free-loader and I have paid for a Netgate 6100 and I am prepared to contribute too. It is the idea of having to pay again that I cannot accept.
Of course, with less beta testers I am aware that my Netgate 6100, pfSense and pfSense+ will develop more slowly or with more bugs and issues. The loss of dev/beta contributors will impact everyone, not just the test community.
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And IMHO Netgate have made a "Redhat RHEL --> Fedora" on the "Home Plus" users ....
I don't think you understand the relation Fedora is to RHEL. Fedora is - and has always been - the upstream development branch for RHEL. You want a new feature in RHEL? Needs to be upstreamed to Fedora first.
In no way is it comparable to Netgate making Plus exclusively a paid for project. Indeed, the pfSense project is the total reverse of Red Hat's approach to development. If they followed a Red Hat approach, then CE would be upstream for Plus (paid product ala RHEL). The reality is that Plus is the upstream for CE. CE should be less stable and quicker developed, whilst Plus should have a longer development period. -
@ahxcjay said in Navigating to Buy pfSense +:
And IMHO Netgate have made a "Redhat RHEL --> Fedora" on the "Home Plus" users ....
I don't think you understand the relation Fedora is to RHEL. Fedora is - and has always been - the upstream development branch for RHEL. You want a new feature in RHEL? Needs to be upstreamed to Fedora first.
In no way is it comparable to Netgate making Plus exclusively a paid for project. Indeed, the pfSense project is the total reverse of Red Hat's approach to development. If they followed a Red Hat approach, then CE would be upstream for Plus (paid product ala RHEL). The reality is that Plus is the upstream for CE. CE should be less stable and quicker developed, whilst Plus should have a longer development period.And the same is on the ceph project. If you need a new feature it gets implemented in the upstream first and then goes to the downstream RH/IBM paid branches.
IMHO Ntegate is making a big mistake that they don't follow this model and sooner or later will have to pay for it.