Quote from: drosophila on Today at 12:50:46 AMThat makes sense: the surge protection adds varistors or / and discharge tubes / or / and "high voltage zeners" towards ground or / and across pairs.[...]
Quote from: OPNenthu on Today at 12:32:12 AMin-line Ethernet surge protectionThat makes sense: the surge protection adds varistors or / and discharge tubes / or / and "high voltage zeners" towards ground or / and across pairs. This adds capacitance and possibly non-linear leakage currents, both of which degrade signal integrity. These ports probably aren't made with 2.5GBps in mind and depending on age may be lucky if they were meant for 1GBps. The internal routing may also not even meet Cat6 requirements.
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The 2.5GbE port on the modem was problematic
Quote from: OPNenthu on Today at 12:32:12 AMMy current cable modem (an ISP-issued replacement, newer model) doesn't seem to care and the 2.5GbE port negotiates fine.Your new modem may have better PHYs or just care less about such issue. Or the old one might just have had degraded components (age) that already led to degraded signal integrity and the additional effects of the surge protection just tipped it out of tolerance.
Quote from: Moeni on June 18, 2026, 10:42:13 AMI've opened a feature request with the details (validation helper, the open-core changes, and the two Business Edition controller inserts described by file/method): https://github.com/opnsense/core/issues/10433
Quote from: besalope on June 18, 2026, 11:25:08 PMhoping this DNSMasq crap blows over with the next couple years before an upgrade fails that requires bare metal reinstall.Pi-Hole FTLDNS = DNSmasqd + Additional Features added by the Pi-Hole Developers ;)