Can pfSense be installed from USB memstick on a USB SSD drive?
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Hello,
I would like to try pfSense on my laptop but I have only one hard drive and I don't want to erase it.
If I boot on the USB memstick, will pfSense find my SSD drive (who is plugged to my laptop via USB) and be able to be installed on it ? Will the SSD drive appears in the list of hard disk to where pfSense will be install during the install process? Just want to make sure before I buy the usb SSD drive.
Thanks
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Yes, it will show USB connected drives as an install target.
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@veptune said in Can pfSense be installed from USB memstick on a USB SSD drive?:
but I have only one hard drive and I don't want to erase it.
You'll be needing more as a "USB SSD" drive.
You've said it yourself : you don't want to erase your hard disk. That is the goal.
Installing pfSense means : "installing an OS on a avaible partition on a drive" means you are going to have to trust the "installer".
I trust the pfSense installer .... but I don't know anything about your data on your drive.
So : better save then sorry : backup your laptop drive anyway.
I know, stupid advice, you've already done this.Be concentrated : when the pfSense installer lists the disk device that are 'candidate' to install pfSense, you have to recognize the "USB SSD" drive. Miss your click, and the laptop's disk gets emptied.
AFAIK : such a USB SSD install will be horrible slow.
For an nice and neat experience, pfSense needs at least 2 (two) NIC interfaces.
And the wifi adapter interface present in your laptop probably doesn't work.Ok, you'll say : I'll add an USB NIC's..... and yes, this might work. Just keep in mind : this kind of setup, you wouldn't advice it to your worst enemy.
If you have some time : get an really old desktop PC. As long as it has a 64 bits AMD/Intel CPU your good.
Add an extra Ethernet NIC card, it will cost you less as the cigarettes I smoke.
Disable sound card stuff, parallel ports and all that nonsense in the BIOS, and your good. -
@Gertjan Thanks for your reply. And I totally agree with you. I will install the pfSense AMI image on AWS, as I just want to take a look (I know I will have to setup a VPC). And I will delete the instance after that.
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Maybe run it as a VM inside your existing OS?