pfSense bugtracker: Issueshttps://redmine.pfsense.org/https://redmine.pfsense.org/favicon.ico?16780521162024-03-10T23:09:39ZpfSense bugtracker
Redmine pfSense - Bug #15328 (New): Kea DHCP corrupts existing leases when a new DHCP pool is addedhttps://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/153282024-03-10T23:09:39ZTom Lane
<p>I set up a couple of DHCP pools for VLANs on a new Netgate 4200 (running pfsense+ 23.09.1), which is replacing an EdgeRouter-X that had been serving DHCP to the same clients. That went fine, and I watched several of the existing VLAN clients re-acquire their existing addresses from the new server. Then I added another DHCP pool attached directly to the PORT2LAN interface. That completely confused matters for existing leases: the server actively rejected attempts to renew those leases and gave out addresses of its own choosing. Now I am seeing two different entries in the DHCP Leases status page for the same MAC address, which surely should not happen. Digging in the DHCP log entries, it looks like when the server was restarted because of the pool addition, all the lease reloads failed with complaints like</p>
<p><code>Mar 10 16:09:18 kea-dhcp4 39285 WARN [kea-dhcp4.dhcpsrv.0x401b3c12000] DHCPSRV_LEASE_SANITY_FAIL The lease 10.0.20.41 with subnet-id 2 failed subnet-id checks (the lease should have subnet-id 3).<br /></code><br />10.0.20.41 is still shown (though as "down") in the Leases page, but there's also an entry for that client with its forcibly-assigned new IP address.</p>
<p>This isn't a fatal problem, assuming that the server manages to keep re-issuing these newly-chosen addresses, but it's mildly annoying. I'm not sure if there will be any outright conflicts as the remaining clients try to renew their leases.</p> pfSense - Bug #15098 (New): Wireguard crashes on boot if PPPoE is the default gatewayhttps://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/150982023-12-15T20:06:02ZOskar Stroka
<p>This only seems to happen after a fresh boot, and only if any PPPoE connection is the default gateway. <br />Even the service watchdog can't bring wireguard back up. <br />The workaround is to go to "Status" - "Interfaces", disconnect the PPPoE line and enable it again. <br />After that wireguard will start without a problem.<br />I've only noticed this issue after moving to newer / better hardware.</p> pfSense - Bug #15084 (New): Upgrading an EFI system installed to ZFS mirror does not upgrade EFI ...https://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/150842023-12-11T16:56:18ZJim Pingle
<p>When an EFI system installed to a ZFS mirror is upgraded, the EFI loader is only updated on the first disk of the mirror (<code>/dev/gpt/efiboot0</code>).</p>
<p>If the system has EFI filesystems on the additional disks, they are not touched during upgrade.</p>
<p>Can be worked around by manually mounting the additional EFI partitions and copying the files.</p>
<p>For example, to update the loader on the second disk:</p>
<pre><code class="shell syntaxhl"><span class="c"># mount -t msdosfs /dev/gpt/efiboot1 /mnt/</span>
<span class="c"># cp -R /boot/efi/ /mnt</span>
<span class="c"># umount /mnt</span>
</code></pre>
<p>Note that systems may or may not actually have a proper EFI filesystem on the additional disks. See <a class="issue tracker-1 status-1 priority-5 priority-high4" title="Bug: Installing to ZFS mirror does not format or populate EFI partition on additional disks (New)" href="https://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/15083">#15083</a></p>
<p>Marked as Plus 24.03/CE 2.8.0 but if it can be fixed in the pfSense-boot package the fix could be picked back to 23.09.1/2.7.2.</p> pfSense - Bug #15082 (New): Upgrade fails due to unmounted EFI filesystemhttps://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/150822023-12-11T14:10:15ZJim Pingle
<p>This may be related to <a class="issue tracker-1 status-1 priority-4 priority-default" title="Bug: Upgrade fails due to undersized EFI filesystem (New)" href="https://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/15081">#15081</a> but it's not definite.</p>
<p>Some upgrades have failed in pfSense-boot if the EFI partition is not manually mounted first.</p>
<p>There are several reports of this where simply manually mounting the EFI partition before starting the upgrade allows it to complete. See <a class="external" href="https://www.reddit.com/r/PFSENSE/comments/18d887u/netgate_releases_pfsense_plus_software_version/kcjcktm/">https://www.reddit.com/r/PFSENSE/comments/18d887u/netgate_releases_pfsense_plus_software_version/kcjcktm/</a> for example.</p>
<p>Marked as Plus 24.03/CE 2.8.0 but if it can be fixed in the pfSense-boot package the fix could be picked back to 23.09.1/2.7.2.</p> pfSense - Bug #15081 (New): Upgrade fails due to undersized EFI filesystemhttps://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/150812023-12-11T14:01:54ZJim Pingle
<p>Some installations as recent as Plus 22.01 / CE 2.6.0 have EFI partitions that were created and/or populated by the old EFIFAT image method. This means that while the EFI <em>partition</em> is 200M, the EFI <em>filesystem</em> is only around 700KB. As a result, these installations are unable to upgrade to recent versions successfully as the loader cannot be updated.</p>
<p>This can be worked around by reformatting the EFI partition directly and copying the appropriate files back into place, as described in this forum post: <a class="external" href="https://forum.netgate.com/post/1140955">https://forum.netgate.com/post/1140955</a></p>
<pre><code class="shell syntaxhl"><span class="c"># mkdir -p /boot/efi</span>
<span class="c"># mount_msdosfs /dev/msdosfs/EFISYS /boot/efi</span>
<span class="c"># mkdir -p /tmp/efitmp</span>
<span class="c"># cp -Rp /boot/efi/* /tmp/efitmp</span>
<span class="c"># umount /boot/efi</span>
<span class="c"># newfs_msdos -F 32 -c 1 -L EFISYS /dev/msdosfs/EFISYS</span>
<span class="c"># mount_msdosfs /dev/msdosfs/EFISYS /boot/efi</span>
<span class="c"># cp -Rp /tmp/efitmp/* /boot/efi/</span>
</code></pre>
<p>There are some potential complications there. For example, the EFI filesystem may not be labeled that way, it could be <code>/dev/gpt/EFISYS</code> or it may have no label at all.</p>
<p>Marked as Plus 24.03/CE 2.8.0 but if it can be fixed in the pfSense-boot package the fix could be picked back to 23.09.1/2.7.2.</p> pfSense - Bug #15032 (Feedback): Kea DHCP sends wrong bootloader file for uefi boothttps://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/150322023-11-25T15:14:36ZDavid Masshardtdavid@masshardt.ch
<p>I already posted this problem in the pfSense forum and was asked to report this issue here. Here is the link of the discussion thread:<br /><a class="external" href="https://forum.netgate.com/topic/184301/kea-dhcp-uefi-pxe-boot-sends-wrong-boot-file">https://forum.netgate.com/topic/184301/kea-dhcp-uefi-pxe-boot-sends-wrong-boot-file</a></p>
<p>I'm using netboot.xyz for network booting and I just switched to Kea DHCP. After the migration I noticed that network booting from UEFI bios does not work anymore, but legacy bios boot still does work.</p>
<p>Here are the configuration values I set in pfSense:</p>
<p>TFTP Server: IP of my netboot server<br />Next Server: IP of my netboot server<br />Default BIOS File Name: netboot.xyz.kpxe<br />UEFI 32 bit File Name: netboot.xyz.efi<br />UEFI 64 bit File Name: netboot.xyz.efi<br />ARM 64 bit File Name: netboot.xyz-arm64.efi</p>
<p>The Kea DHCP server always offers the default netboot.xyz.kpxe file to UEFI machines.</p>
<p>Here are the logs from Kea DHCP for an UEFI bios:</p>
<pre>
Nov 23 12:23:55 kea-dhcp4 14098 INFO [kea-dhcp4.dhcp4.0x3e2f2f5b9300] EVAL_RESULT Expression ipxe_64_lan_pool_0 evaluated to 1
Nov 23 12:23:55 kea-dhcp4 14098 INFO [kea-dhcp4.dhcp4.0x3e2f2f5b9300] EVAL_RESULT Expression ipxe_legacy_lan_pool_0 evaluated to 1
Nov 23 12:23:55 kea-dhcp4 14098 INFO [kea-dhcp4.dhcp4.0x3e2f2f5b9300] EVAL_RESULT Expression ipxe_64_lan evaluated to 1
Nov 23 12:23:55 kea-dhcp4 14098 INFO [kea-dhcp4.dhcp4.0x3e2f2f5b9300] EVAL_RESULT Expression ipxe_legacy_lan evaluated to 1
Nov 23 12:23:55 kea-dhcp4 14098 INFO [kea-dhcp4.leases.0x3e2f2f5b9300] DHCP4_LEASE_ALLOC [hwtype=1 46:15:16:cd:59:84], cid=[no info], tid=0xaccc68dd: lease 172.17.128.2 has been allocated for 86400 seconds
Nov 23 12:23:55 kea-dhcp4 14098 INFO [kea-dhcp4.dhcpsrv.0x3e2f2f5b9300] EVAL_RESULT Expression pool_opt1_0 evaluated to 1
Nov 23 12:23:55 kea-dhcp4 14098 INFO [kea-dhcp4.dhcpsrv.0x3e2f2f5b9300] EVAL_RESULT Expression pool_lan_0 evaluated to 1
</pre>
<p>And here is the generated kea-dhcp4.conf file. (I just removed the reservations)</p>
<pre>
{
"Dhcp4": {
"interfaces-config": {
"interfaces": [
"mlxen0",
"mlxen0.2"
]
},
"lease-database": {
"type": "memfile",
"persist": true,
"name": "/var/lib/kea/dhcp4.leases"
},
"loggers": [
{
"name": "kea-dhcp4",
"output_options": [
{
"output": "syslog"
}
],
"severity": "INFO"
}
],
"valid-lifetime": 7200,
"max-valid-lifetime": 86400,
"ip-reservations-unique": false,
"echo-client-id": false,
"option-data": [
{
"name": "domain-name",
"data": "mydomain"
}
],
"option-def": [
{
"space": "dhcp4",
"name": "ldap-server",
"code": 95,
"type": "string"
}
],
"hooks-libraries": [
{
"library": "/usr/local/lib/kea/hooks/libdhcp_lease_cmds.so"
}
],
"control-socket": {
"socket-type": "unix",
"socket-name": "/tmp/kea4-ctrl-socket"
},
"authoritative": true,
"client-classes": [
{
"name": "ipxe_32_lan_pool_0",
"test": "option[93].hex == 0x0006",
"only-if-required": true,
"option-data": [
{
"name": "boot-file-name",
"data": "netboot.xyz.efi"
}
]
},
{
"name": "ipxe_64_lan_pool_0",
"test": "option[93].hex == 0x0007 or option[93].hex == 0x0009",
"only-if-required": true,
"option-data": [
{
"name": "boot-file-name",
"data": "netboot.xyz.efi"
}
]
},
{
"name": "ipxe_64arm_lan_pool_0",
"test": "option[93].hex == 0x000b",
"only-if-required": true,
"option-data": [
{
"name": "boot-file-name",
"data": "netboot.xyz-arm64.efi"
}
]
},
{
"name": "ipxe_legacy_lan_pool_0",
"test": "not member('ipxe_32_lan_pool_0') and not member('ipxe_64_lan_pool_0') and not member('ipxe_64arm_lan_pool_0')",
"only-if-required": true,
"option-data": [
{
"name": "boot-file-name",
"data": "netboot.xyz.kpxe"
}
]
},
{
"name": "pool_lan_0",
"test": "member('ALL')"
},
{
"name": "ipxe_32_lan",
"test": "option[93].hex == 0x0006",
"only-if-required": true,
"option-data": [
{
"name": "boot-file-name",
"data": "netboot.xyz.efi"
}
]
},
{
"name": "ipxe_64_lan",
"test": "option[93].hex == 0x0007 or option[93].hex == 0x0009",
"only-if-required": true,
"option-data": [
{
"name": "boot-file-name",
"data": "netboot.xyz.efi"
}
]
},
{
"name": "ipxe_64arm_lan",
"test": "option[93].hex == 0x000b",
"only-if-required": true,
"option-data": [
{
"name": "boot-file-name",
"data": "netboot.xyz-arm64.efi"
}
]
},
{
"name": "ipxe_legacy_lan",
"test": "not member('ipxe_32_lan') and not member('ipxe_64_lan') and not member('ipxe_64arm_lan')",
"only-if-required": true,
"option-data": [
{
"name": "boot-file-name",
"data": "netboot.xyz.kpxe"
}
]
},
{
"name": "pool_opt1_0",
"test": "member('ALL')"
}
],
"subnet4": [
{
"id": 1,
"subnet": "172.17.0.0/16",
"option-data": [
{
"name": "domain-name",
"data": "mydomain"
},
{
"name": "domain-search",
"data": "mydomain"
},
{
"name": "domain-name-servers",
"data": "172.17.1.1"
},
{
"name": "routers",
"data": "172.17.1.1"
},
{
"name": "netbios-name-servers",
"data": "172.17.2.1"
},
{
"name": "netbios-node-type",
"data": "8"
}
],
"pools": [
{
"pool": "172.17.128.0 - 172.17.128.199",
"client-class": "pool_lan_0",
"option-data": [
{
"name": "domain-name-servers",
"data": "172.17.1.1"
},
{
"name": "tftp-server-name",
"data": "172.17.2.17"
}
],
"require-client-classes": [
"ipxe_legacy_lan_pool_0",
"ipxe_32_lan_pool_0",
"ipxe_64_lan_pool_0",
"ipxe_64arm_lan_pool_0"
]
}
],
"valid-lifetime": 86400,
"next-server": "172.17.2.17",
"require-client-classes": [
"ipxe_legacy_lan",
"ipxe_32_lan",
"ipxe_64_lan",
"ipxe_64arm_lan"
],
"reservations-in-subnet": true
},
{
"id": 2,
"subnet": "172.20.0.0/16",
"option-data": [
{
"name": "domain-name-servers",
"data": "172.20.1.1"
},
{
"name": "routers",
"data": "172.20.1.1"
}
],
"pools": [
{
"pool": "172.20.128.0 - 172.20.128.255",
"client-class": "pool_opt1_0",
"option-data": [
{
"name": "domain-name-servers",
"data": "172.20.1.1"
}
]
}
],
"valid-lifetime": 86400,
"reservations-in-subnet": true
}
]
}
</pre>
<p>I noticed that the legacy classes in the require-client-classes are on top of all the other classes. After i changed the order so that the legacy classes are at the bottom netboot worked for legacy and UEFI boot.</p>
<p>I also created a patch file that fixes the problem in the services.inc file:</p>
<pre><code class="diff syntaxhl"><span class="gd">--- /etc/inc/services.inc.save 2023-11-24 15:19:26.797541000 +0100
</span><span class="gi">+++ /etc/inc/services.inc 2023-11-24 15:24:17.000000000 +0100
</span><span class="p">@@ -1548,7 +1548,7 @@</span>
if (!is_array($keapool['require-client-classes'])) {
$keapool['require-client-classes'] = [];
}
<span class="gd">- array_unshift($keapool['require-client-classes'], $name);
</span><span class="gi">+ $keapool['require-client-classes'][] = $name;
</span> }
if (!empty($poolconf['rootpath'])) {
<span class="p">@@ -1719,7 +1719,7 @@</span>
if (!is_array($keasubnet['require-client-classes'])) {
$keasubnet['require-client-classes'] = [];
}
<span class="gd">- array_unshift($keasubnet['require-client-classes'], $name);
</span><span class="gi">+ $keasubnet['require-client-classes'][] = $name;
</span> }
if (!empty($dhcpifconf['rootpath'])) {
</code></pre>
<p>Can you please take a look at this if this is the correct solution to this problem?</p> pfSense - Bug #14983 (New): Upgrade can fail when unexpected EFI partitions are present.https://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/149832023-11-14T15:49:22ZSteve Wheeler
<p>pfSense-upgrade can fail when the pfSense-boot post install script tries to update the bot loader if the first EFI partition is not on the boot drive.</p>
<p>For example if the main boot drive is not installed as UEFI and the installation media is still present. The script tries and fails to update the wrong drive aborting the upgrade:</p>
<pre>
Number of packages to be reinstalled: 1
[1/1] Reinstalling pfSense-boot-23.09...
[1/1] Extracting pfSense-boot-23.09: .......... done
mount_msdosfs: /dev/msdosfs/EFISYS: Read-only file system
pkg-static: POST-INSTALL script failed
failed.
__RC=1 __REBOOT_AFTER=10
</pre> pfSense - Regression #14970 (Feedback): Static ARP assignments lose ``permanent`` flag in ARP tablehttps://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/149702023-11-11T21:01:26ZDenny Page
<p>Arp flips back and forth between reporting static arp entries as permanent or having timeouts with large negative values, and eventually looses the concept that entries are static at all.</p>
<pre>
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -s 192.168.230.202 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 expires in 938 seconds [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 938 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 expires in 938 seconds [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -s 192.168.230.201 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 expires in 841 seconds [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 841 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -s 192.168.230.203 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 816 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 812 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 expires in -1699735173 seconds [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 expires in -1699735173 seconds [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 808 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 expires in -1699735173 seconds [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 802 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 797 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 expires in -1699735254 seconds [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 expires in -1699735254 seconds [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 727 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 expires in -1699735254 seconds [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 expires in -1699735261 seconds [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 expires in -1699735261 seconds [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 720 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 expires in -1699735261 seconds [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 expires in -1699735265 seconds [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 expires in -1699735265 seconds [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 716 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 expires in -1699735265 seconds [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 690 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root:
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 660 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 expires in -1699735329 seconds [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 expires in -1699735329 seconds [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 652 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 expires in -1699735329 seconds [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 649 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 expires in -1699735337 seconds [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 expires in -1699735337 seconds [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 644 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 expires in -1699735337 seconds [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 641 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 expires in -1699735343 seconds [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 expires in -1699735343 seconds [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 638 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 expires in -1699735343 seconds [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 expires in -1699735345 seconds [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 expires in -1699735345 seconds [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 636 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 expires in -1699735345 seconds [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 635 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 permanent [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 expires in -1699735351 seconds [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 expires in -1699735351 seconds [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 630 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 expires in -1699735351 seconds [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 expires in -1699735353 seconds [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 expires in -1699735353 seconds [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 628 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 expires in -1699735353 seconds [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 expires in 1140 seconds [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 expires in 1140 seconds [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 1140 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 expires in 1140 seconds [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 expires in 1113 seconds [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 expires in 1113 seconds [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 1113 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 expires in 1113 seconds [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root: arp -i ix0 -a | grep leontp
leontp2 (192.168.230.202) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:40 on ix0 expires in 1112 seconds [ethernet]
leontp3 (192.168.230.203) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:23 on ix0 expires in 1112 seconds [ethernet]
leontp0 (192.168.230.200) at a0:39:75:00:00:7f on ix0 expires in 1112 seconds [ethernet]
leontp1 (192.168.230.201) at 70:b3:d5:e3:d0:22 on ix0 expires in 1112 seconds [ethernet]
[23.09-RELEASE][root@fw]/root:
</pre> pfSense - Regression #14930 (Feedback): Clean installation using Auto (ZFS) + MBR (BIOS) does not...https://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/149302023-10-28T02:19:25ZBoycee .
<p>Installing pfSense 2.7.0 using the Auto (ZFS) + MBR (BIOS) options appears successful, however when the installer reboots the system, the system fails to boot successfully, with a message displayed indicating the operating system is missing.</p>
<p>It is possible to install 2.6.0 with these options (Auto (ZFS) + MBR (BIOS)) and successfully upgrade to 2.7.0.</p>
<p>I believe this issue is inherited from FreeBSD:</p>
<p><a class="external" href="https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=267843">https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=267843</a><br /><a class="external" href="https://reviews.freebsd.org/D40816">https://reviews.freebsd.org/D40816</a></p>
<p>Whilst this issue should ideally be resolved in future releases of pfSense, I assume it must be considering for future in-place upgrades to avoid “bricking” devices already configured in this way.</p> pfSense - Feature #14620 (Assigned): Support running DHCPv4 Server and DHCPv4 Relay at the same t...https://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/146202023-07-27T20:27:59ZChristian McDonaldcmcdonald@netgate.compfSense - Bug #14613 (New): Incorrect wireguard control panel status managementhttps://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/146132023-07-26T14:59:29Zhao zhang
<p><img src="https://redmine.pfsense.org/attachments/download/5201/clipboard-202307262256-rlh8k.png" alt="" /><br />Wireguard can still be clicked on to start while in the boot state and is unresponsive when clicked on, making wireguard uncontrollable.<br />pfsense2.7<br />pfSense-pkg-WireGuard 0.2.0_2</p> pfSense Packages - Feature #13096 (Feedback): Improve robustness of Snort Rules Update Log size l...https://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/130962022-04-25T09:47:09ZBill Meeks
<p>Change the code for truncating the Snort Rules Update Log file when it exceeds the maximum configured size to be more robust by dropping the use of <em>unlink()</em> and use the method used in the Suricata package instead.</p> pfSense Packages - Bug #13095 (Feedback): Snort VRT change in Shared Object Rules path name resul...https://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/130952022-04-25T09:43:25ZBill Meeks
<p>Apparently the Snort Vulnerability Research Team recently altered part of the path name inside the Snort Rules Update archive. This results in failure of the Snort package code to properly extract and copy the Shared Object (SO) rules when performing the periodic rules update. A portion of the long directory path in the archive was changed from "x86_64" to "x86-64" (replaced the underscore with a dash).</p> pfSense Packages - Bug #12979 (Pull Request Review): Snort Rules Update Process Using Deprecated ...https://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/129792022-03-23T14:23:01ZBill Meeks
<p>Beginning around the first of March 2022, the Snort rules update package from the Snort VRT changed the subdirectory name for the precompiled Shared Object (SO) rules, in the archive, from "FreeBSD-12" to "FreeBSD-13". The Snort rules update code in the GUI parses the current FreeBSD version from the operating system, so since pfSense is still on FreeBSD 12.3, this results in the rules update code searching for a non-existent "FreeBSD-12" subdirectory in the archive when unpacking it. Until such time as pfSense moves to FreeBSD-13, this logic needs to be changed and the subdirectory name hard-coded to "FreeBSD-13".</p> pfSense - Todo #10199 (New): Improve Spanish translation interfacehttps://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/101992020-01-22T09:20:34ZAluisco Miguel Ricardo Mastrapa