There was a nasty bug in .79 that partially reverted the config file version. This left a config file that had newer syntax and an older version number. Upgrading past .79 w/out taking some corrective measure will break your system. Again, if you installed or upgraded to .79 and plan on using anything newer, please read.
Two issues in particular affect those that are on .79 and plan to upgrade. During boot, we check to see if the config file version is older than what we claim is current. If it is, we upgrade it. One of the upgrade steps encrypts the (already encrypted) password in the xml file leaving you with a system you couldn't access (there are a couple workarounds that I'll mention shortly). The other somewhat damaging item I've had mixed reports on are irreversible issues with the DHCP config; if you don't use the dhcp server you will be fine. Disabling the server and re-enabling it is not enough to fix it if you are using DHCP. This issue _only_ affects people that upgraded/installed .79 and then upgraded to anything above it (.79.2 is currently the only thing above it). There was about a three hour window where .79 was the most recent version, so I expect very few people actually got affected. Workarounds: This is for those that upgraded to .79. We now version every change that happens on your pfSense box. They are available via the Diagnostics menu, choose Backup/Restore then click Remote. You'll see a list of all the times your configuration changed and at a minimum where in the firewall the change was made (still working on exact change details). You should the "Current" entry showing as " Upgraded config version level from 1.9 to 1.1" or similar. Clicking on the "+" (plus) symbol on the line below will restore the previous configuration file. Then upgrade to .79.2 w/out rebooting. .79.2 will correctly upgrade your configuration file to version 2.0 w/out destroying anything. For those that installed .79 and wish to upgrade. If you aren't using the DHCP server, the only item that should affect you is the password. Upgrade to .79.2 and use menu option number 3 from the shell (Reset webGUI password). If you are using the DHCP server, be thankful this is a new install. Hopefully you've installed before and have an old config laying around. If not, you'll be reconfiguring from scratch, there's not much we can do. You can try disabling/reenabling the DHCP server after upgrading to .79.2. I've had one report of "that works" and one of "that didn't work" - if it doesn't work, reinstall. --Bill PS. For those wondering... 1.10 == 1.1 I apparently failed floating point 101! --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]