PfSense with Gigabyte GA-J1900N-D3V
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Hey,
I want this Board for my new Pfsense build.
I have one question for the owners.
Are the two Realtek nic good enough for a 120/12 MB line.
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- 19 days later
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Just joined the community to give my own two bits on this topic.
I purchased the J1900N-D3V, it came with the F2 bios, and pfSense booted fine with a Nano USB.
Seems to be running okay, operates at 28C average, iperf gets 870Mb/s with CPU below 5%, and hasn't dropped or erred a single packet thus far (according to the logs).
Only issue, is that with certain applications I get a random stutter. Skype for instance, will occasionally stop sending audio/video for a few seconds without actually dropping the call and while continuing to receive audio/video.
I've noticed similar problems with Youtube played over an Xbox, while everything else seems to be fine, including an active Teamspeak server.
My first assumption was to change the firewall optimization to conservative. Sadly this did not seem to resolve the issue.
Anyone have this issue on their installs? My next change will be switching the F2 bios with the F3 mentioned in this thread.
- 2 months later
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Hi,
I was thinking of building a pfSense box with the ga-j1900n-d3v myself too (or, at worst, with the j1900-based Asrock mobos).
For those that already have these in hands (or anyone who knows), could you please help me understand whether this would be a good fit as an addition (most probably within an Antec ISK110 case) ?
http://www.itinstock.com/intel-expi9404ptg2l20-pro1000-pt-quad-port-gigabit-hh-network-adapter-card-14711-p.asp
Thanks in advance
Peppe -
Given the bad rap this board has gotten on esp on the bios front… thought I would say something positive.
I just also bought and replaced an old failed motherboard with the GA-J1900N-D3V. Ordered it via Amazon, put a 2x4GB memory kit in it.
I had to disable the UEFI boot options, but I loaded 2.2.2 64bit on it without an issues once I did.Note that the board came with F3 already installed on it, so I was able to skip some of the pain others have reported.
No stuttering like JWTech reported, but I'll keep an eye on it.
-Bob
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Just a followup a few days in… it's still working very well. I was certainly nervous about this board given the discussion but it has been working really well, no issues at all.
-Bob
- 20 days later
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They released a new Bios (F4) this month for "Improve USB device compatibility". Has anyone tried it yet? I had to go the MS-DOS Bootable Flash Drive route just to get to F3, and am leery of trying for F4.
- 2 months later
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Finally, do you recommend to use GA-C1037UN-EU (rev2) http://es.gigabyte.com/products/page/mb/ga-c1037un-eurev_20/overview/?
- 12 days later
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I just got my board and I love it!! I am having difficulty with one thing though. Online gaming is giving me a tough time.
I am getting latency spikes while i play. Does anyone have experience with slowness using these boards and gaming? I was trying to tweak settings, but haven't been able to find anything that fixes it.
- 11 days later
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Finally, do you recommend to use GA-C1037UN-EU (rev2) http://es.gigabyte.com/products/page/mb/ga-c1037un-eurev_20/overview/?
Am currently using this board and it works fine no issues at all.
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What is the power comsumption of this board or the Gigabyte GA-C1037UN-EU running pfSense? Has anyone done any measurements?
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I bought this board yesterday. Bios F3 was already installed. Installation went smooth, but it can't set IP over DHCP. Latest version of pfsense 2.2.4
Do you guys know any solution, beside adding PCI card, i dont have enough space :-\ -
What is the power comsumption of this board or the Gigabyte GA-C1037UN-EU running pfSense? Has anyone done any measurements?
About 10-15W for ga-j1900n-d3v
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Just got mine yesterday from http://www.mitxpc.com/ Model# EKGBJ1900M350 I got the 4GB RAM instead of the 2GB. Separately I got a Patriot Blaze 60GB SSD for it as well. Mine came with the F4 BIOS and I was able to boot on USB for nano flash setup as well as boot from external USB CD/DVD for full install on the SSD. Only changes I made to BIOS was turn off splash, turn off Vitalization, and disable Audio. Oh ya, using 2.2.4
I setup a test network on my bench with LAN side having my PC and 1000mb switch, and the WAN side having my NAS and a 1000mb switch. I was able to get 80MB throughput with a PC to NAS samba copy of a 3.4GB ISO. Copying it back from the NAS to PC was also 80MB. CPU got to 33% on both runs.
I did the same copy just using a switch, and no router, between the PC and NAS and I get 113MB. This tells me the bottleneck is not the PC or NAS NICs, Cables, or Switches. With the CPU being at 33% as well on the router I am thinking the Realtek NICs in the router.
I am going to setup a VPN on my bench and test this as well. May not get to that for a few days though.
My goal is to turn this into a UTM.
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Do you guys know any solution, beside adding PCI card, i dont have enough space
If there is no space how you want to add a card then? Startech are producing PCI and PCIe expander
cases perhaps this would then a choice for you. -
@BlueKobold:
Do you guys know any solution, beside adding PCI card, i dont have enough space
If there is no space how you want to add a card then? Startech are producing PCI and PCIe expander
cases perhaps this would then a choice for you.I don't. I was thinking about some config tweaks. Many people had this issue. Im wondering if anybody was able to solve this problem.
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Where were you measuring that CPU usage? The figure on the dashboard combines all the cores. You need to use the command line to see the individual core usage:
top -SH
You will probably find one core is at 100%.
Steve
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Does pfsense not use all the Cores?
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top-SH show two of the four cores at 100% idle during the transfer. The other two cores bounce around form 20% to 80% idle during the transfer. So the average would be 75% idle, or 25% usage. seeing how i am not able to nail down the numbers on the working cores I think the dashboard lower 30's% is fairly accurate. Am i missing something? Does pfSense use all cores?
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With the CPU being at 33% as well on the router I am thinking the Realtek NICs in the router.
The realtek NICs can be it, but this is not a must be!
I don't. I was thinking about some config tweaks.
Like the most peoples are thinking. If you owns a mSATA or SSD you could try out to activate
the TRIM support and if you owns a CPU that is capable of TurboBoost mode, you could try out
also setting up or activate the PowerD (highadaptive) mode. But if you go by NanoBSD and owns
a mSATA or SSD it would be better to do a full install.Many people had this issue
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There is no issue! Your switch is only faster then your router not more but also not less!Im wondering if anybody was able to solve this problem.
Which Problem? Let us both imagine you owns two Intel Core i7 CPUs PCs and using iPerf through the
pfSense router the you will see other numbers and if your pfSense is based on a SG-8860 from the
pfSense store I am really sure you will see once more again other numbers!The test your where doing, is comparing your pfSense router (Layer3) against your switch (Layer2)
and this would be not matching any real life scenario!Does pfsense not use all the Cores?
This is even a bit more or less changing at the moment, in earlier days pfSense was only using one CPU
core at the WAN interface but more CPU core for the rest of the entire system. But the developers got
even many more skills and then this thing will be during a change at the time.But on the other hand it will not change anything for you. If you go by hardware fiddled together by
your own and then the pfSense is not serving the same numbers as your switch this is not pointed to
pfSense, then more at the switch you compared to! If you are using a Intel Xeon E3-1286v3 @3,7GHz
and Intel 10 GBit/s server NICs you will archive total other numbers for sure and then it is not relevant
how many cores was in the game but more from which CPU and on which frequency it was running on. -
Exactly.
In pfSense <2.2X the pf process was giant locked and only ever used a single core so machines with fewer but faster cores were preferred if raw throughput was the aim. Since 2.2 the new multithread capable pf in FreeBSD 10 means this is less of an issue but it still won't spread the load evenly across all the cores. You can't just use the dashboard CPU meter when you start hitting limits.
That said you aren't seeing any cores at 100% so I would also start to suspect the Realtek NICs.Steve
- 12 days later
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Well my pico psu died so i had to wait until they shipped me another. I have the system backup since Friday night. I put windows on it and ran a series of test over a two day period. (memtest, prime95, etc) Everything seems fine. I got pfSense back on it today.
I was doing some surfing and read about the checksum offloading. I have that disabled now and my performance went up and CPU utilization went down. I can now copy files across the router at 89MB, both ways, with only 26% CPU utilization (dash board meter). That's still slower than without the router by about 24MB but better than the shaky 80MB i was getting before disabling the checksum offloading. I will try some other stuff/tweaks but if it does not get any faster than that, and not loose stability, I can live with it.
I have plans to order another and will set it up next to the one I just finished. I will then do VPN between the two and see what I get for performance there. I hope to make another post with findings in the next few weeks.
BTW Thinking of getting the other router with Intel NIC's so I can compare the difference there as well. Will still use the J1900 2.4GHz though. This seems like a really low power, robust little CPU.
Thanks!
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So for grins I grabbed a PC from my sons room. Its a AMD 6 core 4.0Ghz CPU with a built in Realtek. I pulled a TPLink card from My NAS i am not using at the moment (It is using the on board Qualcom) and stuck it in the PC to get dual ethernet. I also stuck a WD SATA 3 10,000 RPM drive i have laying around in the PC so i could do a fresh install of pfSense without using the SSD in the PC. I ran the same copy test and got 113MB through the router, same speed i get not using a router and just going through a switch. This PC shows two realtek 8168/8111 cards, just like my mini ITX machine that I am getting just under 90MB from. I used same switch and cables in this test.
The PC did not even max out a single core, and never touched the other 5. The mini ITX bumps 100% on one core while a second core also get used. The other 2 cores see no action.
My conclusion so far is pfSense does not do a good job with multi cores. How sad in this day and age of muti core CPU's that BSD has such a problem. A quad core 2.0 with 2.4 boost is not able to max a 1Gb connection.
With Windows 7 on this same Mini ITX I was able to get over 112MB on the transfer.
So again, its not my hardware, but a limitation of the OS to not use all my hardware.
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I dropped Centos 6.7 with KVM on the mini ITX. Installed pfSense guest using the virtio Intel n1000 drivers. As others reported I get double the CPU usage and half the bandwidth. I guess if i want true 1Gb bandwidth I will have to go with a system using something like an i3 Dual Core 3.4Ghz.
For now i may just turn the mini ITX into a Session Border Controller so I have something new to play with :D
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i ordererd this Gigabyte GA-J1900N-D3V 2 Weeks ago which came already with F3 Bios.
Everything worked (Sophos, IPFire, VYos etc) . Couldn´t install on my 128gb Crucial SSD Pfsense. During formatting process it showed me Read Error etc. so i thought my SSD got problems but everything else worked.
Yesterday i finally got pfsense on it setting Bios F4 to Storage UEFI First and the rest to Legacy. CSM to Legacy and Uefi and after that PFsense would install flawlessly without a hitch.
ah, i used the 64bit Version of PFsense.
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hopefully this update this board with:
1)intel nics
- n3150 or n3700 braswell cpus @ 14nm as they use less power and have aes-ni
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hopefully this update this board with:
1)intel nics
- n3150 or n3700 braswell cpus @ 14nm as they use less power and have aes-ni
I think it will need more CPU for a solid 1Gb solutions though
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I'm also having the problem (bug?) where the GA-J1900N-D3V will not pull a DHCP address from my modem (AT&T's 2WIRE 3600HGV). No matter what I've tried, including forcing each the NIC and the modem to various modes of duplex/flow control/MDIX/whatever, inserting a gigabit switch between the modem and NIC, forcing MAC addresses, tweaking DHCP timeouts, etc., it wouldn't budge. After three+ hours, I finally disabled re0, inserted a USB gigabit NIC (Anker Gigabit USB 3.0), and was up in less than 60 seconds. At this point, I'm not even concerned about performance – it's working, and that's all that I care about right now. Funny, the whole point of me choosing this board was because of the dual NICs. Oh well.
If anyone tracks down a solution to this problem, I'd love to hear about it. Thanks!
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I'm also having the problem (bug?) where the GA-J1900N-D3V will not pull a DHCP address from my modem (AT&T's 2WIRE 3600HGV).
This is not a plain modem, it is a router! Please read what AT&T is writing about by it selfs;
Designed for a home network, the 2wire 3600HGV 4-port router is ideal for delivering….If anyone tracks down a solution to this problem, I'd love to hear about it. Thanks!
Yo, this would be really easily, you must set up a static IP at the WAN Interface or Port of the pfSense
and this must be a IP address from the entire IP address range from the router, but static and not via
DHCP given from the AT&T router. As an example:
2WIRE 3600HGV:
Network:192.168.1.0/24 (255.255.255.0)
IP Address of the home router: 192.168.1.1/24
DNS 1: ISPs DNS
DNS 2: Google 8.8.8.8
DHCP: offIf the DHCP Server must be on:
DHCP IP Range: 192.168.1.2 - 192.168.1.100pfSense WAN Port:
IP Address: 192.168.1.250/24 (static)
DNS: 192.168.1.1/24pfSense Gateway IP:
Network: 192.168.178.1.0/24 (255.255.255.0)
LAN IP Address: 192.168.178.1/24
Gateway IP Address: 192.168.1.250
DNS: 192.168.1.250/24 -
@BlueKobold:
This is not a plain modem, it is a router!
You are quite correct, and if I had a choice in equipment, this would be the last device I'd pick. However, I don't, and switching ISPs is not an option at this time. Still, this Gigabyte board replaces another which was running pfSense and pulling an IP successfully, so I wasn't expecting significantly different behavior – at least not with something so common as obtaining a DHCP lease!
Yo, this would be really easily, you must set up a static IP at the WAN Interface …
I do appreciate you taking the time to post these instructions, but there's a fairly common setup to approximate a bridge mode, and it was working perfectly well for 2+ years with my previous pfSense installs. The designated device behind the router (i.e. the pfSense box) is issued the public IP of the router, via DHCP, and is placed in the DMZ (of sorts). I don't want to derail the thread with the specifics, so here's the bottom line: the "bridge mode" setup worked fine with two previous pfSense boxes, and it works fine with the USB NIC I'm now using instead of re0.
I'm thinking this is either a bug with pfSense, or with the FreeBSD NIC driver. My next step is to capture some packets for inspection to see what's really going on.
- 2 months later
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I've had this board for 3 months and the experience has not been good.
My ISP provides internet, VOIP and IPTV using VLAN's. Internet access use PPPoE. pfSense would lose the IP address after 3-4 days and the only way to get the connection back was to reboot - a simple disconnect/connect or ifdown ifup didnt' work. Also snort would stop working on the WAN interface.
Finally, I used an old intel desktop gigabit PCI card for the WAN interface and all of the problems disappeared, I have now been running for 1 month with no problems.
So, at least in the case where you need PPPoE I would be wary of using this board.
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A follow-up to my problem pulling a DHCP address from a 2WIRE 3600HGV (via AT&T's U-Verse): I was trying to spoof a MAC address on the WAN-assigned NIC. That's what prevented the pfSense box from getting an IP via DHCP. Once I removed the forced MAC, DHCP worked as expected. Perhaps a bug in the Realtek driver? FWIW, the ASIX AX88179-based gigabit USB 3.0 adapter worked great (it was my interim solution), able to push at least 30mbps (limited by speed of ISP). It might be worth looking closer at these USB NICs.
- 17 days later
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I've had my Gigabyte J1900 running since March and has been rock solid (after the bios update juggling).
Swapping my main switch, creating a couple of new VLAN to segment my christmas lights network, and network down.
Port light on switch not lit, even through PFsense reporting link up. Anyway 4hrs later, also confirmed that the primary NIC on the mobo is not responding. (Resurrected gigabit USB2 NIC) and getting 70-80Mbps from my 105Mbps ISP.
So out of warranty what do I replace it with?
Memory, SSD mini-itx case/psu all okay.
I was thinking one of the n3150 or n3700 braswell's maybe the Zbox-CI323 nano (dual-NIC), or better off just replacing with another J1900?
I'm not needing high performance or ultra-low power, just average average connecting to 110Mbps ISP three home vlans and a couple of openvpn connections
Regards
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If I was going to do it again, I'd probably go with something that had integrated Intel NICs. I don't know if Realtek NICs are inherently inferior to Intel's, or if it's that the drivers aren't as fully featured or reliable, but it's rare that you hear of folks having issues with Intel NICs. If you're okay w/ Realtek, then perhaps you're also okay with a USB NIC as a permanent solution – as long as the throughput is there. So why not give a USB 3.0 adapter (e.g. ASIX AX88179) a shot? At under $20/ea, it could be a cheap fix.
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Thx.
I think I might get a USB NIC and persevere for 4-6months and see if the braswell's mature.
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I'm not needing high performance or ultra-low power, just average average connecting to 110Mbps ISP three home vlans and a couple of openvpn connections
Perhhaps using the follower of the J1900, a little bit less powerful (- 7%) but also using less electric power
6 Watt against 10 Watt. -
I had my LAN NIC fail this morning and after a couple of hard cold boots, it recovered.
On a grasp at straws this morning, since I had lost my config in rebuild, i tried the latest 2.3 alpha (yes warnings taken in), and both NICs are now working, so there's something in 2.2.5 that this board doesn't like.. ;-)
- 2 months later
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I'm aware that this thread is getting old (but so am I) and people seem to be more happy now than in the start of the thread.. However, I ran into the same kind of problems.. But the only setting that caused problem was trying to boot from USB formatted with the latest pfSende img. Debian works fine. Putting in HDD from old computer with pfSense installed from DVD runs perfectly. So right now I think the only problem is in the pfSense distro.
- 2 months later
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I just ordered this board on recomendations from some other boards, then I find this problem after 4 hours of troubleshooting!
I have the F4 Firmware out of the box, followed all the BIOS settings mentioned in the thread, never really had an trouble installing pfsense 2.2.6.
RE0 DHCP would never work over the WAN. Then switched I switched to RE1 for WAN and bam, instant IP.
So RE1 was working for LAN and WAN, but nothing will work on RE0, DHCP, Fixed, etc for WAN or LAN. I even took a switch, gave the RE0 WAN a fixed PUBLIC IP that is allowed on the, hooked a host to the switch with an IP that is public and could not ping it.
So is my RE0 dead? I made RE0 LAN and nothing could ping it from the switch, no arp, etc.
I have none of the problems mentioned, but this RE0 just not work for WAN DHCP or LAN Fixed IP.
Looking on the mobo they both have the same chipsets.
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I have none of the problems mentioned, but this RE0 just not work for WAN DHCP or LAN Fixed IP.
Perhaps there is something in the BIOS to set it up as working in the so called bypass mode?