Quote from: lmoore on Today at 04:24:00 PMWhen you first sign in to the Web GUI, is the Uptime being reported correctly and does the time on your computer match OPNsense?
The next time this happens, instead of rebooting, select option 11 to restart all services.
Which time zone have you selected in OPNsense?
In your environment, where is your DNS server located?
When you SSH to OPNsense, do you use the IP address or FQDN?
The screen shot you posted on the 18th shows your memory usage at 76.5%, has it gone above this mark?
Quote from: roohoo on April 17, 2026, 08:51:20 PMInterestingly, this afternoon I grabbed another computer: A Ryzen 3900x-powered machine with 128GB of RAM, an M.2 nvme drive, and a Quadro video card. I installed OPNSense with a bare setup (just interfaces configured) and started it up.
Now, around two hours later, I have exactly the same issue: That's a third completely different computer used to install and run OPNSense that has the webGUI die in a few hours of running!
Quote from: jcdick1 on Today at 03:15:50 AMSome VMs in my environment have only a single interface on the LAN network, others have some combination of the three. Physical devices (PCs, streaming devices, etc) are all on the LAN network.But you should still be aware of possible A-symmetric Routing despite the Firewall Rules so make sure to double check on that or at least keep an eye on it !!
The Management and Storage networks have firewall rules to keep them isolated - for all intents and purposes, unrouted.
QuoteKEA is configured to only have its DHCPv6 server active on the LAN network (only interface with a checkbox in the dropdown).This could be related to the above or simply a case of adjusting local settings/tuning configuration on those hosts.
But its "Leases DHCPv6" page is showing active leases on the "Management" interface.
And on the hosts, those corresponding IPv6 addresses are showing on their LAN-associated interface.
At the same time, some devices on the LAN network cannot get IPv6 addresses.