>>Buy hardware that's not faulty.  pfsense is *way* more robust than what it 
>>seems to be for you.  what network interfaces do you
>>have?   if other than broadcom or Intel, switch to Intel.

In frustration I have purchased 2 new Intel Pro/1000GT NIC's.  They have lasted 
almost 48 hours before the internal disconnection 
between the LAN and WAN recurred yet again..... The state table is reported as 
having showed 56 entries on index.php. Fixed by 
rebooting.  Nothing else.  (Cheaper cards have lasted longer!)

Surely we can now conclusively say this is not a NIC or hardware issue?  This 
happens for me on completely different machines with 
 >= 256M RAM.

I have most recently been running 1.2-RC1, pretty much since it was released.  
it teased me by running fine for 2 weeks, before 
reproducing the same problems.

One of my colleagues has now abandoned pfSense, as it has proven to be 
unreliable for him.

I do not want to, however the current reliability is also unsustainable for me.

Is there any way I can assist to fix this problem?

Kind regards
David Hingston




----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Tortise" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <support@pfsense.com>
Sent: Saturday, July 21, 2007 10:23 AM
Subject: Re: [pfSense Support] Programming pfSense to Reboot and Dump LAN / WAN 
traffic


Thank you Vivek

>> connect both systems to a hub and run tcpdump on the other machine logging 
>> all traffic some place.

Yes they are already on a LAN with a switch.  I didn't realise TCPDump could be 
run from another machine other than the one being
dumped from.  From what you suggest it can.  I'll study it up and see if I can 
get it to!  (Unless someone here knows the syntax for
this well and can just roll it off?)

>>Buy hardware that's not faulty.  pfsense is *way* more robust than what it 
>>seems to be for you.  what network interfaces do you
>>have?   if other than broadcom or intel, switch to intel.

We (3 of us) believe this is not a hardware issue.  3 of us are on the same ISP 
here in NZ, and experiencing the same issues for
many months.  The ISP uses much the same Motorola Cable modem to interface into 
our static IP's.  The same fault occurs using
completely different hardware here also.  I have another pfSense box running at 
alternative premises connected to quite a different
ISP and that box just goes, in line with what we believe we should be 
expecting.  Swapping the boxes also suggests it is not a
hardware problem as they all work at the alternative ISP / venue.

I find running Monowall also has the same experience here, - the same Monowall 
box is stable for months off site.  I have been
tempted to post to the monowall list also, cross posts are considered bad 
etiquette and I presume the monowall folks are also on
both lists, I have refrained.  (Is this correct?)

It suggests to me there is something about our ISP which is a problem, perhaps 
their hardware or perhaps something about their
traffic.  Clearly this should not be the case, but the onus falls on us 
(rightly or wrongly) to prove this.

It also suggests to me there is a vulnerability in FreeBSD as the problem 
occurs in both Monowall and pfSense with this cable ISP.

I'd prefer my firewall not need random rebooting.  We'd all like to help within 
our power and ability to move this forwards as
FreeBSD and its children (pfSense and Monowall) are largely fantastic!

Kind regards
David Hingston




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