Quote from: Tobanja on Today at 06:28:52 PMWith the help of AI, I have created a guest VLANNext time skip the Machine Learning Chatbot and just read the OPNsense Documentation : https://docs.opnsense.org/manual/how-tos/guestnet.html
Quote from: Tismofied on Today at 05:26:53 PMhow would unbound on OPNsense fit in this scenario if one were to use it as upstream server?The same as it does now for me but you enter the IP Address of OPNsense on the Default LAN network instead of 127.0.0.1:5335 in the Pi-Hole webGUI :)
QuoteWhen checking the opnsense live log, I notice the ping is present from the phone, but coming from the standard LAN interface in spite of all my struggles.
Quote from: txr13 on February 26, 2026, 05:14:26 PMQuote from: alex303 on February 26, 2026, 04:34:34 PMThis is why your firewall should always use open source BIOS like core boot or libreboot. UEFI is just too much hassle and insecure.
I would agree that using coreboot is an excellent option, particularly where the hardware vendor officially supports it. I find the Protectli boxen are very good on that point, and any of those which run OPNsense for me are indeed using coreboot.
...which boots using UEFI.
Quote from: franco on February 07, 2026, 06:44:42 PMYes, make sure you are on 26.1.1 and run this from the console:
# opnsense-patch 4912a67
Cheers,
Franco
Quote from: falken on Today at 04:31:16 PMYou can force the interface name by using device hints.
Edit device.hints from the shell and edit (or create) the file /boot/device.hints
Add entries to bind the MAC address to a specific device name.
Example: To make a specific Intel card (igb0) always be lan0:
hint.igb.0.mac="00:11:22:33:44:55"
hint.igb.0.name="lan0"
This will keep the interface names identical between your boxes.