On 2013–05–08 b...@todoo.biz wrote:
> I am not sure what you are precisely trying to do… But if your
> idea is to have a neutral wireless AP, you will want to:
>
> 1. bridge the WAN and WLAN together.
>
> 2. deactivate all firewalling on your box (advanced network or
> firewall settings).
>
On 2013–05–08 b...@todoo.biz wrote:
> I am not sure what you are precisely trying to do…
This box is a replacement for an old Debian AP I set up a few years
ago which worked flawlessly but died recently. It did not do any
filtering, it was just a bridge between wired and wireless network
using h
I am not sure what you are precisely trying to do…
But if your idea is to have a neutral wireless AP, you will want to:
1. bridge the WAN and WLAN together.
2. deactivate all firewalling on your box (advanced network or firewall
settings).
3. In case you want to filter, you might want to ch
On 2013–05–08 Chris Bagnall wrote:
> On 8/5/13 7:41 pm, Marco wrote:
> >no IP configured
>
> This would be your problem.
This was the problem, indeed. I set the LAN to DHCP and I can see
the pfSense box and access the web configurator.
> >How can I make the pfsense box visible from the LAN side
On 8/5/13 7:41 pm, Marco wrote:
no IP configured
This would be your problem.
How can I make the pfsense box visible from the LAN side? Am I doing
something wrong or is this expected?
I suspect it's expected behaviour. If you want to use pfSense purely as
an access point, then you're probab