Bret
It's very easy to install pfsense on a self-contained thumb drive. I'd
recommend that and just changing your bios boot order as appropriate.
Once you've setup the configuration/etc on the thumb drive and you feel
comfortable moving it to 'production' it's very easy to export you whole
conf
On Nov 17, 2015, at 12:45 PM, Steve Yates wrote:
> Paul Mather wrote on Thu, Nov 12 2015 at 1:38 pm:
>
>> Unfortunately, with this configuration, unbound does not listen on the
>> IP aliases: it only listens on the primary IP addresses of LAN,
>> INTERNAL, and localhost.
>
> I don't have
Hello Bret,
The answer to your first question is not really. You can do an advanced
install but will have to make the partitions needed beforehand using a live
system disk and then play around with grub after installing PfSense on
freed partitions. Fairly complex especially since this is BSD and n
On Wed 18 Nov 2015 06:14:16 NZDT +1300, Bret Busby wrote:
The short answer is no and no.
> Does installing pfSense, especially, using the "Quick/Easy Install
> option", allow for installation so as to allow for multiple boot
> options (being able to choose an alternative boot option)?
pfsense is
On Wed 18 Nov 2015 04:09:41 NZDT +1300, Brian Caouette wrote:
> I can confirm I have see this a well. Started with the 2.2.x series.
> Happens with almost every reboot or upgrade of package.
> re-downloading the blacklist fixes it until the next cycle.
For me it started with 2.2.5 and di not happ
>Does installing pfSense, especially, using the "Quick/Easy Install option",
allow for installation so as to allow for multiple boot options
No, it will erase the hard drive and set up a freebsd file system. Might be
worth using another drive altogether to preserve the old drive, or use
clonezilla