Watchguard XTM 5 Series
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Anyone running anything interesting?
I just went to the local computer store and found an E4300 (1.8ghz) that I installed today… I don't know if that would help you test or not.
Im more interested in getting a dual core unit in this box so losing a little speed on a single core didn't bother me. With two cores though it should be faster.
I am noticing though that the single core model reported (without onboard monitoring) +- 55c for a temp and now both cores hover right at 30c. I believe the board temp was lying.
Anyone know if these units will run a PLGA775 socket proc? (E4700) The E4600 unit seems to be the last LGA775...
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Can someone please confirm that the installation instructions in this thread also works for the WatchGuard XTM 525 model as well. I just purchased one from Ebay very cheap and would like to install pfSense. Please advise ASAP.
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One more question. I can't find any specs on the CPU, memory, and other hardware details on the Watchguard XTM 525 model.
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The 525 is one of the second gen XTM5 models. I've never seen one. I would expect it to be just as easy to install but no promises. ;)
Anything you can tell us about the hardware would be great.Steve
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The E4600 unit seems to be the last LGA775…
There seem to be a lot of cpus that will work. The only reason I chose the E4500 was because it closely matched the original celeron. Same lithography size and same FSB speed. Others here have fitted various others. I think the most 'extreme' confirmed to work is a Q8200S. Bare in mind that the XTM5 has a less powerful PSU and fewer fans than the Lanner box it's based on.
Steve
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The 525 is one of the second gen XTM5 models. I've never seen one. I would expect it to be just as easy to install but no promises. ;)
Anything you can tell us about the hardware would be great.Steve
I will be getting the box on Thursday and will report the hardware. Now I need to read up on the installation instructions.. It would be great if someone gave me a quick overview of the installation instructions. Additionally, is there anything (cables, CF card, etc.) I need to purchase for the installation process.
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On the gen 1 XTM5 is really pretty straight forward:
Download an appropriate pfSense NanoBSD image such as this: http://files.uk.pfsense.org/mirror/downloads/pfSense-2.1.5-RELEASE-1g-amd64-nanobsd.img.gz
Write the image to a CF card (of 1GB or bigger). Use physdiskwrite directly or extract the image from the gzip file and use Win32diskimager.
Insert the CF card in the XTM5 and boot. :DYou will need to have the console cable connected and a terminal running at 9600bps so that you can do the initial interface assignment before connecting to the webgui.
You may have read about the unlocked BIOS in this thread but that's for the gen1 box, DO NOT try to flash that. ;)
You may also choose to go straight to a 2.2beta image, the RC is imminent at this point.
The only thing we have to go on in terms of hardware is the official hardware guide. It states 'Intel dual core CPU'. The gen1 box had a single core Celeron so that's definitely different. The PSU look slightly different but could just be a change of manufacturer. Other than that it looks identical externally.
Steve
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On the gen 1 XTM5 is really pretty straight forward:
Download an appropriate pfSense NanoBSD image such as this: http://files.uk.pfsense.org/mirror/downloads/pfSense-2.1.5-RELEASE-1g-amd64-nanobsd.img.gz
Write the image to a CF card (of 1GB or bigger). Use physdiskwrite directly or extract the image from the gzip file and use Win32diskimager.
Insert the CF card in the XTM5 and boot. :DYou will need to have the console cable connected and a terminal running at 9600bps so that you can do the initial interface assignment before connecting to the webgui.
You may have read about the unlocked BIOS in this thread but that's for the gen1 box, DO NOT try to flash that. ;)
You may also choose to go straight to a 2.2beta image, the RC is imminent at this point.
The only thing we have to go on in terms of hardware is the official hardware guide. It states 'Intel dual core CPU'. The gen1 box had a single core Celeron so that's definitely different. The PSU look slightly different but could just be a change of manufacturer. Other than that it looks identical externally.
Steve
The unit will not come with the console cable. Do you know how to build one? Please advise.
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I have a Watchguard cable but I think a Cisco cable is the same (will work). It's DB9 one end and RJ45 the other.
https://forum.pfsense.org/index.php?topic=43574.msg413770;topicseen#msg413770
https://forum.pfsense.org/index.php?topic=43574.msg421117;topicseen#msg421117Steve
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I use a Cisco cable here just fine.
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I use a Cisco cable here just fine.
Can you provide me more details.. If you have an example of one on Ebay, please provide me a link to the Ebay auction. I don't have any serial ports on my laptop, so would I need a serial or RJ45 to USB cable as well. Please advise.
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Yes you will need a USB-Serial port adapter. Alternatively you can get an all in one device like this:
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/251718442782
I've not used that specifically myself but I would imagine it will work fine with the XTM5.Steve
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On the gen 1 XTM5 is really pretty straight forward:
Download an appropriate pfSense NanoBSD image such as this: http://files.uk.pfsense.org/mirror/downloads/pfSense-2.1.5-RELEASE-1g-amd64-nanobsd.img.gz
Write the image to a CF card (of 1GB or bigger). Use physdiskwrite directly or extract the image from the gzip file and use Win32diskimager.
Insert the CF card in the XTM5 and boot. :DYou will need to have the console cable connected and a terminal running at 9600bps so that you can do the initial interface assignment before connecting to the webgui.
You may have read about the unlocked BIOS in this thread but that's for the gen1 box, DO NOT try to flash that. ;)
You may also choose to go straight to a 2.2beta image, the RC is imminent at this point.
The only thing we have to go on in terms of hardware is the official hardware guide. It states 'Intel dual core CPU'. The gen1 box had a single core Celeron so that's definitely different. The PSU look slightly different but could just be a change of manufacturer. Other than that it looks identical externally.
Steve
I want to make sure I download the right pfsense image file for the Watchguard XTM 525 model. Can someone please confirm (see below)….
Which Image Do I Need?
Computer Architecture: AMD64 (64-bit)
Platform: Embedded (NanoBSD) typically with CF
Console: Serial
CF card size: 1 GB
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Yep, that should get you the same file I linked to above.
You can use 32bit of course if you want. We don't know what CPU your box will have but I'm assuming it's 64bit capable. ;)The docs wiki page has recently been greatly improved for writing images I've just noticed:
https://doc.pfsense.org/index.php/Writing_Disk_ImagesSteve
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Yep, that should get you the same file I linked to above.
You can use 32bit of course if you want. We don't know what CPU your box will have but I'm assuming it's 64bit capable. ;)The docs wiki page has recently been greatly improved for writing images I've just noticed:
https://doc.pfsense.org/index.php/Writing_Disk_ImagesSteve
It may be the Celeron E3400…
I want to make sure I understand the installation process so I will post a few questions in 20 minutes. I want to install pfsense on a hard drive. I have a spare 250GB Seagate SATA III drive that I plan to install in the Watchguard box. Do I need a drive caddy? As far a terminal, I assume I will need something like HyperTerminal for the initial setup. If yes, do you know the baud rate, parity, etc. settings?
1. Will I need to flash the BIOS to install pfsense on a hard drive in the Watchguard box?
2. How do you bring up the BIOS in the Watchguard machine? -
Ah, things are more complex installing to harddisk. On another box you would boot from a USB stick and install to the HD but the XTM5 (gen1 at least) is locked down so you can't. You would have to install to the HD in another machine and move the drive across into the XTM5. There is no option to install to a HD from the NanoBSD image.
Without looking inside the box I have no idea what hardware you might need. In the gen1 there are mounting points for a drive holder of some kind but it's not included and there is a spare SATA power connector.
I always use putty as a serial terminal. The board rate is 9600 in 2.1.X. If you switch to 2.2 it is changed to 115,200 which is much nicer. You can set a higher speed in 2.1.5 in the webgui.Steve
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Ah, you edited while I was typing. ;)
The bios in the gen2 box may be more or less locked down. No way to know until you try it.
The BIOS appears on the serail console by default at 115200 on the gen1. You can enter the setup by pressing 'TAB' (not del) but the only thing you can change is the time and date.There's a strong possiblity that the only thing that changed between gen1 and gen2 was the CPU in which case everything is much easier. :)
Steve
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Ah, things are more complex installing to harddisk. On another box you would boot from a USB stick and install to the HD but the XTM5 (gen1 at least) is locked down so you can't. You would have to install to the HD in another machine and move the drive across into the XTM5. There is no option to install to a HD from the NanoBSD image.
Without looking inside the box I have no idea what hardware you might need. In the gen1 there are mounting points for a drive holder of some kind but it's not included and there is a spare SATA power connector.
I always use putty as a serial terminal. The board rate is 9600 in 2.1.X. If you switch to 2.2 it is changed to 115,200 which is much nicer. You can set a higher speed in 2.1.5 in the webgui.Steve
According to the installation document in the URL below, there is an option 99 to install on a hard drive..
https://doc.pfsense.org/index.php/Installing_pfSense#Embedded
Additionally, I have a 2GB CF card. So do I need to select the 2GB CF pfsense image file?
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You can write the NanoBSD image to a hard drive and it will run from there no problem.
What you can't do is boot from the CF card with a Nano image on it and then install to a HD from there.You can use the 1GB image on a 2GB CF card. And in fact I'd recommend that you do. It's writes much faster to the card but more importantly CF cards that claim to be 2GB are often actually smaller than that causing the 2GB image not to fit.
Steve
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Ah, you edited while I was typing. ;)
The bios in the gen2 box may be more or less locked down. No way to know until you try it.
The BIOS appears on the serail console by default at 115200 on the gen1. You can enter the setup by pressing 'TAB' (not del) but the only thing you can change is the time and date.There's a strong possiblity that the only thing that changed between gen1 and gen2 was the CPU in which case everything is much easier. :)
Steve
Please fill in the terminal emulation settings below for the BIOS screen and pfsense installation:
To access the Watchguard BIOS Screen:
Speed (baud): 115200
Data Bits: ?
Stop Bits: ?
Parity: ?
Flow Control: ?pfsense Installation (v 2.1.5):
Speed (baud): 9600
Data Bits: ?
Stop Bits: ?
Parity: ?
Flow Control: ?