ML
    • Recent
    • Categories
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Groups
    • Register
    • Login

    pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved IT Discussion
    65 Posts 12 Posters 9.3k Views
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • S
      scotth @Dashrender
      last edited by

      @Dashrender said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

      @black3dynamite said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

      @Dashrender said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

      @scotth said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

      @Emad-R said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

      @scotth

      They are both great, but when you want to scale you want them on hardware and not VM that will handicap your hypervisor.

      When you think about hardware and low power, there are alot of alterantives better than those 2 and cheaper, netgate provides PFsense but for 200$ ad the idea of desktop machine acting as router and using alot of power does not make sense to me.

      However pi3 or better makes perfect sense, but guess what neither PFsense or OPN runs on ARM

      https://store.netgate.com/MBT-2220-system.aspx

      After my lab, I'm planning to load it up on an HP Elite 8300 SFF i5 quad core with 8 GB RAM and an addin dual Intel NIC. It's what I'm running Sophos on now. I don't experience any issues with this setup.
      I picked it up for $100 during a desktop refresh.
      EDIT: I'm also planning retire my spinning drive.

      For home use - a desktop class machine is totally fine.
      Not sure an SSD will make any difference in the performance of the firewall though.

      SSD will help squid proxy cache.

      how useful is that in a home network?

      I'm hoping that it'll impede momma and kid from being blatantly foolish in their cruising activities.

      <<yes, I have attempted to share information about foolish behavior on the internet>>

      scottalanmillerS DashrenderD 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • scottalanmillerS
        scottalanmiller @scotth
        last edited by

        @scotth said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

        @Emad-R said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

        @scotth

        They are both great, but when you want to scale you want them on hardware and not VM that will handicap your hypervisor.

        When you think about hardware and low power, there are alot of alterantives better than those 2 and cheaper, netgate provides PFsense but for 200$ ad the idea of desktop machine acting as router and using alot of power does not make sense to me.

        However pi3 or better makes perfect sense, but guess what neither PFsense or OPN runs on ARM

        https://store.netgate.com/MBT-2220-system.aspx

        After my lab, I'm planning to load it up on an HP Elite 8300 SFF i5 quad core with 8 GB RAM and an addin dual Intel NIC. It's what I'm running Sophos on now. I don't experience any issues with this setup.
        I picked it up for $100 during a desktop refresh.
        EDIT: I'm also planning retire my spinning drive.

        @WrCombs needs that, lol. Your router has 300% the power of his brand new laptop!

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • scottalanmillerS
          scottalanmiller @Dashrender
          last edited by

          @Dashrender said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

          @scotth said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

          @Emad-R said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

          @scotth

          They are both great, but when you want to scale you want them on hardware and not VM that will handicap your hypervisor.

          When you think about hardware and low power, there are alot of alterantives better than those 2 and cheaper, netgate provides PFsense but for 200$ ad the idea of desktop machine acting as router and using alot of power does not make sense to me.

          However pi3 or better makes perfect sense, but guess what neither PFsense or OPN runs on ARM

          https://store.netgate.com/MBT-2220-system.aspx

          After my lab, I'm planning to load it up on an HP Elite 8300 SFF i5 quad core with 8 GB RAM and an addin dual Intel NIC. It's what I'm running Sophos on now. I don't experience any issues with this setup.
          I picked it up for $100 during a desktop refresh.
          EDIT: I'm also planning retire my spinning drive.

          For home use - a desktop class machine is totally fine.
          Not sure an SSD will make any difference in the performance of the firewall though.

          It should not.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • scottalanmillerS
            scottalanmiller @black3dynamite
            last edited by

            @black3dynamite said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

            @Dashrender said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

            @scotth said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

            @Emad-R said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

            @scotth

            They are both great, but when you want to scale you want them on hardware and not VM that will handicap your hypervisor.

            When you think about hardware and low power, there are alot of alterantives better than those 2 and cheaper, netgate provides PFsense but for 200$ ad the idea of desktop machine acting as router and using alot of power does not make sense to me.

            However pi3 or better makes perfect sense, but guess what neither PFsense or OPN runs on ARM

            https://store.netgate.com/MBT-2220-system.aspx

            After my lab, I'm planning to load it up on an HP Elite 8300 SFF i5 quad core with 8 GB RAM and an addin dual Intel NIC. It's what I'm running Sophos on now. I don't experience any issues with this setup.
            I picked it up for $100 during a desktop refresh.
            EDIT: I'm also planning retire my spinning drive.

            For home use - a desktop class machine is totally fine.
            Not sure an SSD will make any difference in the performance of the firewall though.

            SSD will help squid proxy cache.

            Only if the cache is larger than RAM.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • scottalanmillerS
              scottalanmiller @scotth
              last edited by

              @scotth said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

              @Dashrender said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

              @black3dynamite said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

              @Dashrender said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

              @scotth said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

              @Emad-R said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

              @scotth

              They are both great, but when you want to scale you want them on hardware and not VM that will handicap your hypervisor.

              When you think about hardware and low power, there are alot of alterantives better than those 2 and cheaper, netgate provides PFsense but for 200$ ad the idea of desktop machine acting as router and using alot of power does not make sense to me.

              However pi3 or better makes perfect sense, but guess what neither PFsense or OPN runs on ARM

              https://store.netgate.com/MBT-2220-system.aspx

              After my lab, I'm planning to load it up on an HP Elite 8300 SFF i5 quad core with 8 GB RAM and an addin dual Intel NIC. It's what I'm running Sophos on now. I don't experience any issues with this setup.
              I picked it up for $100 during a desktop refresh.
              EDIT: I'm also planning retire my spinning drive.

              For home use - a desktop class machine is totally fine.
              Not sure an SSD will make any difference in the performance of the firewall though.

              SSD will help squid proxy cache.

              how useful is that in a home network?

              I'm hoping that it'll impede momma and kid from being blatantly foolish in their cruising activities.

              <<yes, I have attempted to share information about foolish behavior on the internet>>

              A cache cannot do that.

              S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • S
                scotth @scottalanmiller
                last edited by

                @scottalanmiller said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                @scotth said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                @Dashrender said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                @black3dynamite said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                @Dashrender said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                @scotth said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                @Emad-R said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                @scotth

                They are both great, but when you want to scale you want them on hardware and not VM that will handicap your hypervisor.

                When you think about hardware and low power, there are alot of alterantives better than those 2 and cheaper, netgate provides PFsense but for 200$ ad the idea of desktop machine acting as router and using alot of power does not make sense to me.

                However pi3 or better makes perfect sense, but guess what neither PFsense or OPN runs on ARM

                https://store.netgate.com/MBT-2220-system.aspx

                After my lab, I'm planning to load it up on an HP Elite 8300 SFF i5 quad core with 8 GB RAM and an addin dual Intel NIC. It's what I'm running Sophos on now. I don't experience any issues with this setup.
                I picked it up for $100 during a desktop refresh.
                EDIT: I'm also planning retire my spinning drive.

                For home use - a desktop class machine is totally fine.
                Not sure an SSD will make any difference in the performance of the firewall though.

                SSD will help squid proxy cache.

                how useful is that in a home network?

                I'm hoping that it'll impede momma and kid from being blatantly foolish in their cruising activities.

                <<yes, I have attempted to share information about foolish behavior on the internet>>

                A cache cannot do that.

                Sorry, proxy

                scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @scotth
                  last edited by

                  @scotth said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                  @scottalanmiller said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                  @scotth said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                  @Dashrender said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                  @black3dynamite said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                  @Dashrender said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                  @scotth said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                  @Emad-R said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                  @scotth

                  They are both great, but when you want to scale you want them on hardware and not VM that will handicap your hypervisor.

                  When you think about hardware and low power, there are alot of alterantives better than those 2 and cheaper, netgate provides PFsense but for 200$ ad the idea of desktop machine acting as router and using alot of power does not make sense to me.

                  However pi3 or better makes perfect sense, but guess what neither PFsense or OPN runs on ARM

                  https://store.netgate.com/MBT-2220-system.aspx

                  After my lab, I'm planning to load it up on an HP Elite 8300 SFF i5 quad core with 8 GB RAM and an addin dual Intel NIC. It's what I'm running Sophos on now. I don't experience any issues with this setup.
                  I picked it up for $100 during a desktop refresh.
                  EDIT: I'm also planning retire my spinning drive.

                  For home use - a desktop class machine is totally fine.
                  Not sure an SSD will make any difference in the performance of the firewall though.

                  SSD will help squid proxy cache.

                  how useful is that in a home network?

                  I'm hoping that it'll impede momma and kid from being blatantly foolish in their cruising activities.

                  <<yes, I have attempted to share information about foolish behavior on the internet>>

                  A cache cannot do that.

                  Sorry, proxy

                  That's totally different. A proxy has no benefit from the SSD. A very large cache would, but not a proxy. So back to "what is the purpose?"

                  S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • S
                    scotth @scottalanmiller
                    last edited by

                    @scottalanmiller I'm planning to retire an old spinning drive. That's all

                    DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • DashrenderD
                      Dashrender @scotth
                      last edited by

                      @scotth said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                      @Dashrender said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                      @black3dynamite said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                      @Dashrender said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                      @scotth said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                      @Emad-R said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                      @scotth

                      They are both great, but when you want to scale you want them on hardware and not VM that will handicap your hypervisor.

                      When you think about hardware and low power, there are alot of alterantives better than those 2 and cheaper, netgate provides PFsense but for 200$ ad the idea of desktop machine acting as router and using alot of power does not make sense to me.

                      However pi3 or better makes perfect sense, but guess what neither PFsense or OPN runs on ARM

                      https://store.netgate.com/MBT-2220-system.aspx

                      After my lab, I'm planning to load it up on an HP Elite 8300 SFF i5 quad core with 8 GB RAM and an addin dual Intel NIC. It's what I'm running Sophos on now. I don't experience any issues with this setup.
                      I picked it up for $100 during a desktop refresh.
                      EDIT: I'm also planning retire my spinning drive.

                      For home use - a desktop class machine is totally fine.
                      Not sure an SSD will make any difference in the performance of the firewall though.

                      SSD will help squid proxy cache.

                      how useful is that in a home network?

                      I'm hoping that it'll impede momma and kid from being blatantly foolish in their cruising activities.

                      <<yes, I have attempted to share information about foolish behavior on the internet>>

                      I'm lost - what does a squid proxy have to do with keeping the kids off the internet - other than possibly it's a webfilter as well as a caching proxy - my original question was about the benefit of SSD - to which the reply was squid proxy cache.. ok that make sense, but how is a proxy cache helpful for most home users - is there really a lot of overlap in a home to make this worth while?

                      scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • DashrenderD
                        Dashrender @scotth
                        last edited by

                        @scotth said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                        @scottalanmiller I'm planning to retire an old spinning drive. That's all

                        But if it means spending money - that money could possibly be used better somewhere else. That's basically what I was getting at.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • scottalanmillerS
                          scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                          last edited by

                          @Dashrender said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                          @scotth said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                          @Dashrender said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                          @black3dynamite said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                          @Dashrender said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                          @scotth said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                          @Emad-R said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                          @scotth

                          They are both great, but when you want to scale you want them on hardware and not VM that will handicap your hypervisor.

                          When you think about hardware and low power, there are alot of alterantives better than those 2 and cheaper, netgate provides PFsense but for 200$ ad the idea of desktop machine acting as router and using alot of power does not make sense to me.

                          However pi3 or better makes perfect sense, but guess what neither PFsense or OPN runs on ARM

                          https://store.netgate.com/MBT-2220-system.aspx

                          After my lab, I'm planning to load it up on an HP Elite 8300 SFF i5 quad core with 8 GB RAM and an addin dual Intel NIC. It's what I'm running Sophos on now. I don't experience any issues with this setup.
                          I picked it up for $100 during a desktop refresh.
                          EDIT: I'm also planning retire my spinning drive.

                          For home use - a desktop class machine is totally fine.
                          Not sure an SSD will make any difference in the performance of the firewall though.

                          SSD will help squid proxy cache.

                          how useful is that in a home network?

                          I'm hoping that it'll impede momma and kid from being blatantly foolish in their cruising activities.

                          <<yes, I have attempted to share information about foolish behavior on the internet>>

                          I'm lost - what does a squid proxy have to do with keeping the kids off the internet - other than possibly it's a webfilter as well as a caching proxy - my original question was about the benefit of SSD - to which the reply was squid proxy cache.. ok that make sense, but how is a proxy cache helpful for most home users - is there really a lot of overlap in a home to make this worth while?

                          Squid's two main functions are a proxy to filter, or a cache. Since he is not using the cache, we assume it is for the filter.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • 3
                            360col
                            last edited by

                            OPNSense user here. Its just more friendly. Tried Sophos XG and it killed my WAN speed even with most things disabled. I have used Sophos UTM in production for many year previously.

                            I have a very old EdgeRouter sittign around. Wondering if I'll run the latest firmware. I didn't like it much back then so its been clotting dust.

                            DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • DashrenderD
                              Dashrender @360col
                              last edited by

                              @360col said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                              OPNSense user here. Its just more friendly. Tried Sophos XG and it killed my WAN speed even with most things disabled. I have used Sophos UTM in production for many year previously.

                              I have a very old EdgeRouter sittign around. Wondering if I'll run the latest firmware. I didn't like it much back then so its been clotting dust.

                              What didn't you like about it? FYI - it's not a UTM, so you can't look at it from that POV.
                              As far as I know, all ER are still supported.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • scottalanmillerS
                                scottalanmiller
                                last edited by

                                pfSense can be turned into a full UTM. Don't know about OPNSense.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • 1
                                  1337
                                  last edited by 1337

                                  Pfsense have been around much longer and very likely have a significantly larger user base. So assuming there are no other differences that would be a big plus for pfsense, unless you want to be a beta tester or just play around.

                                  It's also easier to find guides and info on setup as well for pfsense. Pfsense also has packages (OPNsense don't) so you can add more functionality like squid, haproxy etc.

                                  I don't think there is much difference behind the scenes though when it comes to standard functions as both are running freebsd and using the PF packet filtering system from the openbsd project.

                                  We just use pfsense and call it a day. Don't have time to try every possible permutation of a firewall 🙂

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • S
                                    scotth
                                    last edited by

                                    Sorry. Was at a site meeting a vendor for an installation. I'm catching up.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • scottalanmillerS
                                      scottalanmiller
                                      last edited by

                                      pfSense's maturity and market presence definitely make a big difference. And they have that add-on UTM deal.

                                      S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • S
                                        scotth @scottalanmiller
                                        last edited by

                                        @scottalanmiller said in pfSense vs OPNSense - Fanboy fued or real differences?:

                                        pfSense's maturity and market presence definitely make a big difference. And they have that add-on UTM deal.

                                        I have both running in VMs and am exploring.

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • black3dynamiteB
                                          black3dynamite
                                          last edited by

                                          Squid is already part of OPNsense. Here a full list of plugins available.

                                          Dynamic DNS Support
                                          Let's Encrypt client
                                          Get all peers connected to a local network
                                          BIND domain name service
                                          Apply a persistent 10 second boot delay
                                          c-icap connects the web proxy with a virus scanner
                                          Webserver cache
                                          Antivirus engine for detecting malicious threats
                                          Collect system and application performance metrics periodically
                                          Debugging Tools
                                          Flexible DNS proxy supportung DNSCrypt and DoH
                                          RADIUS Authentication, Authorization and Accounting Server
                                          The FRRouting Protocol Suite
                                          Control ftp-proxy processes
                                          Reliable, high performance TCP/HTTP load balancer
                                          A sample framework application
                                          IGMP-Proxy Service
                                          IDS Proofpoint ET Pro ruleset (needs a valid subscription)
                                          IDS PT Research ruleset (only for non-commercial use)
                                          IDS Snort VRT ruleset (needs registration or subscription)
                                          Connection speed tester
                                          L2TP server based on MPD5
                                          LCDProc for SDEC LCD devices
                                          LLDP allows you to know exactly on which port is a server
                                          Proxy multicast DNS between networks
                                          Net-SNMP is a daemon for the SNMP protocol
                                          Nginx HTTP server and reverse proxy
                                          Prometheus exporter for machine metrics
                                          Traffic Analysis and Flow Collection
                                          Network UPS Tools
                                          OpenConnect Client
                                          SMTP mail relay
                                          PPPoE server based on MPD5
                                          PPTP server based on MPD5
                                          End of life, superseded by FRR plugin
                                          Redis DB
                                          Relayd Load Balancer
                                          RFC-2136 Support
                                          Protect your network from spam
                                          Secure socks5 proxy
                                          Siproxd is a proxy daemon for the SIP protocol
                                          SMART tools
                                          End of life, superseded by Net-SNMP plugin
                                          Agent for collecting metrics and data
                                          The cicada theme - grey/orange
                                          A suitably dark theme
                                          The tukan theme - blue/white
                                          Tinc VPN
                                          The Onion Router
                                          Universal Plug and Play Service
                                          VMware tools
                                          vnStat is a console-based network traffic monitor
                                          Kerberos authentication module
                                          Group and user ACL for the web proxy
                                          Wake on LAN Service
                                          Xen guest utilities
                                          Enterprise-class open source distributed monitoring agent
                                          Zabbix Proxy enables decentralized monitoring
                                          Virtual Networks That Just Work
                                          
                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                          • JaredBuschJ
                                            JaredBusch
                                            last edited by

                                            FFS, so much stupid going all left, right, and center..

                                            1. What are the WAN speeds involved.
                                              1. Ubiquiti sells nice gear, but there are potential speed limits depending on router configuration.
                                            2. UTM at home? WTF is the point of such a complicated setup.
                                              1. There is no good free UTM anyway.
                                            3. WTF are you doing for backups that is not already encrypted before going over the wire? You don't need a VPN for back ups.
                                            4. You have an old Ubiquiti router but didn't say shit about the model. As mentioned it is a ROUTER, if you hated it because it didn't massage your dick, then that is your fault for not knowing WTF you bought.
                                              1. There is not a single model of Ubiquiti router that cannot be upgraded to the current firmware.
                                            5. Software routers are silly things that burn power and time.

                                            So what should you do?

                                            Depending on your WAN speed needs, buy a Ubiquiti or Mikrotik router that will handle the needed speeds. I personally recommend the Ubiquiti ER-X for "technical" home use first, then the Ubiquiti ER-4 if you need more speed with the QoS enabled.

                                            For normal home use, I recommend the Ubiquiti Amplifi Instant Mesh System for $179.

                                            Buy a RaspberryPi 3 kit with case and card for $50 someplace and install Pi-Hole. Setup your Router to send all DNS to the Pi-Hole.

                                            Setup MeshCentral for remote support

                                            Setup ZeroTier for any point to point "vpn style" needs you may have.

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                                            • 1
                                            • 2
                                            • 3
                                            • 4
                                            • 1 / 4
                                            • First post
                                              Last post