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    Can somebody help me get to Yamaha YNCA throug a pfSense?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General pfSense Questions
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    • tinfoilmattT Offline
      tinfoilmatt @Mastiff
      last edited by tinfoilmatt

      @Mastiff said in Can somebody help me get to Yamaha YNCA throug a pfSense?:

      I have chosen WAN_DHCP for IPv4 and None for IPv6, which I don't use.That should be correct?

      "WAN_DCHP" selected for Default gateway IPv4 means that any traffic allowed to pass out to WAN/the Internet by the firewall ruleset and without any gateway explicity selected for a given rule (i.e., policy based routing) will use your WAN interface's gateway, meaning (I assume) your ISP's connection, as its next-hop router. This is desirable in the vast majority of cases, including your remote access to this pfSense system from outside the LAN.

      (And if you're not using IPv6, then of course that's fine set to "None".)

      That should be a safe change to apply without blocking your remote access. But it could require a system reinitialization/recycle/reboot if there's wonky system config elsewhere. Fair warning.

      And then yes, once you do that you're perfectly safe to add a gateway (i.e., 192.168.1.53) that doesn't otherwise have anything to do with your remote access. But again—depending on overall system config, you could find yourself in a situation where the system's routing table doesn't 'come back up' right, typically requiring a reboot to resolve.

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      • M Offline
        Mastiff @tinfoilmatt
        last edited by

        @tinfoilmatt Thanks! With no way to reboot it unless I pay for a taxi, I for once (which is very uncharacteristic for me) will opt for safe, not sorry... 😁

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        • johnpozJ Offline
          johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator @Mastiff
          last edited by

          @Mastiff said in Can somebody help me get to Yamaha YNCA throug a pfSense?:

          So it's not a real WAN.

          to pfsense it is - so now it nats, etc.. Such a setup is counter productive..

          There is little point to such a setup.

          If you want to use pfsense as an internal router - then turn off natting functions. But now your upstream device needs to nat your downstream networks and allow for them in its rules.

          If a network is considered a wan or transit/connector network there shouldn't be "hosts" on this network your other devices want to talk to.

          An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools
          If you get confused: Listen to the Music Play
          Please don't Chat/PM me for help, unless mod related
          SG-4860 25.07.1 | Lab VMs 2.8.1, 25.07.1

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          • tinfoilmattT Offline
            tinfoilmatt @johnpoz
            last edited by

            @johnpoz said in Can somebody help me get to Yamaha YNCA throug a pfSense?:

            If you want to use pfsense as an internal router - then turn off natting functions.

            Completely agree that an 'internal' or 'inner' or 'core' or anything but an edge router should not be performing NAT.

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            • tinfoilmattT Offline
              tinfoilmatt @johnpoz
              last edited by

              @johnpoz said in Can somebody help me get to Yamaha YNCA throug a pfSense?:

              [On a] transit/connector network there shouldn't be "hosts" on this network your other devices want to talk to.

              Also why so-called 'transit' IPv4 networks are typically assumed to be /30. Four IP addresses: subnet ID (at the bottom of the range), broadcast address (at the top of the range), and two 'useable' addresses assigned to two hosts in between.

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              • johnpozJ Offline
                johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator @tinfoilmatt
                last edited by

                @tinfoilmatt the mask doesn't really matter - but sure a /30 is common, so is /29 and even /28

                There may be multiple routers on this same transit network, you might have a ha pair sort of router where there would be multiple IPs and a vip that is used, etc.

                A network used to connect routers together shouldn't really have "hosts" on it - ie devices you want to interact with from your other networks. Or you would need to host route on the device in the transit, or use nat and port forwards, etc..

                It leads a an unnecessary complex network.

                An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools
                If you get confused: Listen to the Music Play
                Please don't Chat/PM me for help, unless mod related
                SG-4860 25.07.1 | Lab VMs 2.8.1, 25.07.1

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                • tinfoilmattT Offline
                  tinfoilmatt @johnpoz
                  last edited by

                  @johnpoz said in Can somebody help me get to Yamaha YNCA throug a pfSense?:

                  There may be multiple [i.e., more than two] routers on this same transit network, you might have a ha pair sort of router where there would be multiple IPs and a vip that is used, etc.

                  Ah, very true. And the same goes for IPv6 transit networks.

                  @johnpoz said in Can somebody help me get to Yamaha YNCA throug a pfSense?:

                  A network used to connect routers together shouldn't really have "hosts" on it

                  Re-reading, I also noticed a lack of precision in my statement "two hosts in between." I believe it'd have been more precise had I said "two routers in between." (But again, that still fails to consider transit networks with more than two routers attached for whatever the reason.) I believe you're pointing out that 'router ≠ host' and vice versa.

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                  • stephenw10S Online
                    stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                    last edited by

                    You shouldn't need a static route here because pfSense is NATing the connection to it's WAN IP. The receivers don't need a route because they are in the same subnet.

                    The state table there showed traffic both ways. The pcap shows the initial TCP handshake completes. Then we see no further response.

                    We probably need to see a more complete pcap there with the view level set higher or the actual pcap file.

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                    • tinfoilmattT Offline
                      tinfoilmatt @stephenw10
                      last edited by

                      @stephenw10 said in Can somebody help me get to Yamaha YNCA throug a pfSense?:

                      You shouldn't need a static route here because pfSense is NATing the connection to it's WAN IP.

                      This doesn't account for the receiver initiating a connection to Home Assistant, nor multicasting an attempt to 'discover' (or 're-discover') Home Assistant.

                      OP confirmed in this post that at least one of the receivers at-issue has a default gateway of 192.168.1.1—which is homed to a Netgate 3100 sitting at the true LAN edge, and where the proposed static route would need to be configured.

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                      • tinfoilmattT Offline
                        tinfoilmatt @stephenw10
                        last edited by

                        @stephenw10 I agree with you, however, that 192.168.1.200:50000 (one of the receivers) should be sending its reply traffic back to 192.168.1.53:[source port] (the virtualized 'internal' pfSense router) directly—which should then 'follow' state back to 192.168.6.2:[source port] (one of the HA VMs).

                        I readily admit I'd be surprised if a static route configured on 192.168.1.1 resolves this.

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                        • stephenw10S Online
                          stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                          last edited by stephenw10

                          Well yes indeed. This setup only allows the HA server to open connections to the receivers not the other way around.

                          If the receivers are required to open connections back then this WAN-LAN setup is the wrong way to go about it.

                          Adding static routing on the edge pfSense will result in asymmetric routing and you would then also need to add workarounds for that. Ugly!

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