Navigation

    Netgate Discussion Forum
    • Register
    • Login
    • Search
    • Categories
    • Recent
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Search

    ESXi 5.5 setup

    Virtualization
    3
    9
    1437
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • V
      vmnotsogood last edited by

      Hi,

      I am renting a dedicated server from OVH, a fairly good one too for my purposes. With the server i get remote access (KVM etc), 1 IP address, 1 NIC (well 2 but 1 is disabled and does nothing).

      I looked around and found pfSense, now before i start i'm going to outline what i want to achieve and if pfSense or even ESXi isn't what i need please let me know.

      I will have 2 VMs, 1 windows and the other linux though i may split my linux depending on roles. The windows i just need to be able to RDP to it and maybe run IIS on it. The linux i will have an email server, web server etc so need to be able to set this up.

      I have followed numerous guides on trying to set this up but all assume i have physical access or 2 NICs.

      I'd like to maybe have pfSense on the front even ahead of ESXi so that when i RDP onto the windows i can use vsphere to make changes locally but only once i have done everything else, something along the lines of:
      Web -> WAN -> pfSense -> Lan -> VMs + vsphere connection

      Let's forget everything i've done so far and tried and assume i know nothing, can someone please give me a step by step guide on how to set up pfSense on my server as no matter what i can never get the WAN to get an IP.

      I'm willing to reinstall ESXi and start from scratch again.

      To clarify i need to be able to have multiple domains pointing to 1 IP and being able to route them to either just 1 linux VM or multiple, have different websites running and an email server on the linux VM, be able to RDP onto a windows VM. Basically turn pfSense into a router and forward what i want to where etc.

      Also with pfSense running is it still possible to have on the linux box domain 1 takes you to A and domain 2 takes you to be with apache or will it not be able to like a normal non VM server?

      If any more information is required then please let me know.
      Thanks in advanced.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • johnpoz
        johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator last edited by

        Couldn't post before because attachments were not working.

        Attachment is how I would go about it.  You would need to allow pfsense admin on the wan side first, etc.  Not sure how you would set this up from the get go but you said you had console access.  So you can console to the esxi after you install it?

        Where the pfsense vnic attached to vswitch0 would be its wan, vswitch1 would be its lan and another 1 could be attached to the vmkern portgroup/vswitch.  And the vms would be inside the esxi host box for sure - not sure why I drew it like that ;)


        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • V
          vmnotsogood last edited by

          The thing is i install pfSense on a VM and i still have full access to ESXi as in like no changes are made by pfSense and everything works as was before. Even if i install pfSense and changes are made i still have KVM console access so i won't lose access.

          Can i get a step by step from the beginning from anyone?

          Thanks

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • johnpoz
            johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator last edited by

            And you have 1 public IP address, what IP address are you getting on pfsense wan and what IP are you accessing esxi with?  What do you think pfsense should block exactly?  Pfsense can only block to stuff BEHIND it..

            I already showed you how the network could look – if you need a hold my hand watch the ball bounce guide to setting this up.. You shouldn't be setting it up ;)

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • V
              vmnotsogood last edited by

              I have 1 IP, pfSense never gets any IP on the WAN. The only way i can access pfSense is localhost via another VM. I don't need a hold my hand but no matter what i do the WAN doesn't do anything on pfSense so was looking for a step by step to see if i'm doing anything wrong?

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • E
                EMWEE last edited by

                Thats because you probably already use that IP for you esxi management network. You cant use one IP twice.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • V
                  vmnotsogood last edited by

                  Ok, then how do i go about swapping it over so ESXi stops using it and pfSense uses seeing as i do have console access even without the need for the public IP.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • E
                    EMWEE last edited by

                    You answered you're own question.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • johnpoz
                      johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator last edited by

                      So clearly if you have 1 IP and expected both pfsense and esxi vmkern to share that you were doing something wrong ;)

                      Your vmkern is going to have to be behind pfsense, so as I showed in my drawing it has a rfc1918 address BEHIND pfsense.  You then setup pfsense to forward to your vmkern IP when you hit port X on pfsense wan IP.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • First post
                        Last post

                      Products

                      • Platform Overview
                      • TNSR
                      • pfSense
                      • Appliances

                      Services

                      • Training
                      • Professional Services

                      Support

                      • Subscription Plans
                      • Contact Support
                      • Product Lifecycle
                      • Documentation

                      News

                      • Media Coverage
                      • Press
                      • Events

                      Resources

                      • Blog
                      • FAQ
                      • Find a Partner
                      • Resource Library
                      • Security Information

                      Company

                      • About Us
                      • Careers
                      • Partners
                      • Contact Us
                      • Legal
                      Our Mission

                      We provide leading-edge network security at a fair price - regardless of organizational size or network sophistication. We believe that an open-source security model offers disruptive pricing along with the agility required to quickly address emerging threats.

                      Subscribe to our Newsletter

                      Product information, software announcements, and special offers. See our newsletter archive to sign up for future newsletters and to read past announcements.

                      © 2021 Rubicon Communications, LLC | Privacy Policy