You could always write a new boot0 to your disk. If you load a FreeBSD disc and run the following command on your pfsense hard disk.
fdisk -B -b /boot/boot0 device Where device is your pfsense drive. This should do the trick. Source: https://www.freebsd.org/doc/handbook/boot-introduction.html Hope this helps! -----Original Message----- From: List [mailto:list-boun...@lists.pfsense.org] On Behalf Of Kostas Backas Sent: Friday, June 30, 2017 6:17 AM To: list@lists.pfsense.org; pfSense Support and Discussion Mailing List Subject: Re: [pfSense] MBR restore Maybe install a fresh version and restore a backup? Kostas Sent from my iPhone ________________________________ From: List <list-boun...@lists.pfsense.org> on behalf of Nicola Ferrari (#554252) <nick-li...@posteo.eu> Sent: Friday, June 30, 2017 2:02:47 PM To: list@lists.pfsense.org Subject: [pfSense] MBR restore Hi guys! I'm writing here since one of my collegues had to move a pfsense install to new hardware, so imaged the pfsense using clonezilla but forgot to enable the option to save MBR also. So, after restoring the image, pfSense is no more able to boot. What's the best way to restore the MBR on an existing and already-configured pfSense install? Thanks to everybody! Nick -- +---------------------+ | Linux User #554252 | +---------------------+ _______________________________________________ pfSense mailing list https://lists.pfsense.org/mailman/listinfo/list Support the project with Gold! https://pfsense.org/gold _______________________________________________ pfSense mailing list https://lists.pfsense.org/mailman/listinfo/list Support the project with Gold! https://pfsense.org/gold _______________________________________________ pfSense mailing list https://lists.pfsense.org/mailman/listinfo/list Support the project with Gold! https://pfsense.org/gold