Fiber optic to pfSense Box
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I mean some ISPs will provide some limited connection speed, often for testing, until you authenticate correctly. It's possible you're seeing that if everything internally is linked at 1G or higher.
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I called the ISP and the technicians came today. They weren't happy what I was planning, they told is it is not possible, and I was cut from the network.
The younger technician told me that I wasn't getting internet and the problem lied at the box for the flat. He plugged it in to the ISP and called it a day but gave me a wink or so I thought of what I wanted to do. I checked the ISP router settings and there is a new WAN connection known as CGNAT for internet. The VLANIDs looked changed, so probably I would have to change them.
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Can only try it and see.
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In a different forum with the same ISP a customer suggested to OP that one bridge would be called WAN with Internet VLAN ID , one bridge would be for IPTV with IPTV VLAN ID . He put DCHP client on bridge WAN where in the NAT rule for source will mask the with him the OUT interface . He created a bridge for the LAN and the rest of the Ethernet ports.
I did that . The VLAN DCHP and the bridge receive different IPs.
I am not sure if he uses optic or Ethernet cable .When it comes to the LOID and password . I tried to unmask the censored password, but the text becomes invisible. Either I have to guess it or I dont have any idea .
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Do you mean 'bridge' there or interface? I wouldn't expect to need a bridge here. Unless it's for the IPTV somehow.
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@stephenw10 Yes, he said bridge . How would you explain the different IPs on the VLAN interface with DCHP and on the bridge with DCHP client ? Isnt a bridge a interface ?
This is the original quote with full translation
"The two vlans thus assigned to Ethernet 1 must be assigned to their own bridge. One will be called the WAN bridge and you enter vlan555 in it. In the second bridge named IPTV, you insert vlan777 and ethernet port(s) into it, in which you will connect the TV receiver. You put the DHCP client on the WAN bridge, and in the source network rule it will mask the out interface with it. You make a third LAN bridge and insert the rest of the Ethernet ports! "
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Is that in relation to pfSense of something else? OpenWRT perhaps?
Bridges are used differently in OpenWRT.
But the fact that anyone is referring to being able to connect directly seems like it can work.
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Well, the person in question says he uses a Mikrotik which uses RouterOS .
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Ah, OK. I'm not familiar with RouterOS but it could well be similar in use of bridges for grouping NICs.
Either way if it's possible in RouterOS it should be possible in pfSense. Unless they have used some custom scripting etc.
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It seems that it doesn't work. Probably I would have to cancel my contract.