Quote from: nero355 on July 03, 2026, 07:05:03 PMThe same goes for Fibreglass ONTs and xDSL Modems :)
But I was thinking to have something like this :
But then two times each :
- Block Private Networks - Incoming
- Block Private Networks - Outgoing
- Block BOGON Networks - Incoming
- Block BOGON Networks - Outgoing
Quote from: BrandyWine on July 03, 2026, 03:58:02 AMSome more on that hardware. Is it a Lanner mobo? If so what model #?wow that went realy over my head but let me try to explain wat i know , the hardware itsels functions the only interface that links that previusly work was igb2 , i put igb1 and igb2 as a pcie with 2 nics , but after updating and putting some plugins now th nics show all link when i put ethernet cable on there really dont know why but better for me i think.
There's a SMBus controller in pciconf, this could be how bypass is controlled once OS boots.
dmesg|grep -Ei "bypass|watchdog"
The relays could be commanded from OS via gpio, this would need investigating as I suspect there's nothing in OPNsense distro supporting this bypass out-of-the-box.
2nd, online info suggests the bios should have a util for setting the default state of the bypass.
Was the bypass even tested with the OS running? Two laptops with IP in same /24, two x-over cables, laptops each connect to the matching bridge ports (looks like AAA over BBB), so any vertical pair. Can the laptops ping each other? If no x-over cables then two small switches, or one switch that can be managed to have two vlans, A-port and laptop-A on one vlanID, B-port and laptop-B on the other vlanID.
Depending on what the bios has available, it may be difficult to control the bypass on freeBSD. Can probably find some source code to compile, or even an existing klm, so more digging is needed.
Quote from: BrandyWine on July 03, 2026, 03:58:02 AMSome more on that hardware. Is it a Lanner mobo? If so what model #?
There's a SMBus controller in pciconf, this could be how bypass is controlled once OS boots.
dmesg|grep -Ei "bypass|watchdog"
The relays could be commanded from OS via gpio, this would need investigating as I suspect there's nothing in OPNsense distro supporting this bypass out-of-the-box.
2nd, online info suggests the bios should have a util for setting the default state of the bypass.
Was the bypass even tested with the OS running? Two laptops with IP in same /24, two x-over cables, laptops each connect to the matching bridge ports (looks like AAA over BBB), so any vertical pair. Can the laptops ping each other? If no x-over cables then two small switches, or one switch that can be managed to have two vlans, A-port and laptop-A on one vlanID, B-port and laptop-B on the other vlanID.
Depending on what the bios has available, it may be difficult to control the bypass on freeBSD. Can probably find some source code to compile, or even an existing klm, so more digging is needed.
Quote from: pfry on July 03, 2026, 01:09:57 AMHuh! Yeah, I'd expect the em driver... but then igb and em seem oddly interchangeable.
ifconfig may also show the devices. My concern was this line in their lame excuse for a data sheet: "3 x 1G bypass bridge pair", which usually indicates the presence of a hardware bypass, which must be deactivated (via custom software interface) to use the interfaces... somewhat normally. So the drivers may load, the interfaces may be configurable, but they will be electrically isolated by the bypass. But that's a supposition - I didn't find better docs offhand.