Quote from: newsense on Today at 04:52:05 AMYou can start by posting a health check and the output of this commandls -ltrh /var/crash/
destination_net Inverting destinations is only allowed for single targets to avoid mis-interpretations bf920f1c-a9ab-4383-8dd7-9ca5e9b8c2f7;1;keep;;371;pass;1;0;lan;in;inet46;any;;;;;0;1;0;0;0;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"Allow access to WAN";0;lan;;1;PrivateIPv4,PrivateIPv6;
destination_net Inverting destinations is only allowed for single targets to avoid mis-interpretations 2ace6415-7b35-4c42-9bb8-ee5415de71ec;1;keep;;451;pass;1;0;opt1;in;inet46;any;;;;;0;1;0;0;0;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"Block access to other internal networks but allow access to the Internet";0;opt1;;1;PrivateIPv4,PrivateIPv6;

Quote from: meyergru on Today at 01:48:45 PMWhat would be the difference between WAN and pppoe0?
One is just an assigned name for the underlying PPPoE interface - unless you made the mistake of naming the physical NIC (or VLAN) as WAN.
That is the problem with many of those videos: There is no such thing as a step-by-step tutorial, because each situation is different, like your example clearly shows.
You have to understand how things work, otherwise you will be stuck at each crossing.
With a PPPoE connection, you can have one of these topologies on the WAN side:
1. ISP ONT/modem -> physical NIC ("ONT") -> PPPoE interface ("WAN")
2. ISP ONT/modem -> physical NIC ("ONT") -> VLAN ("VLANXX") -> PPPoE interface ("WAN")
With OpnSense, you have either two or three logical interfaces. Name them according to the scheme above. Firewall rules should always be applied to "WAN", which usually is the same thing as "pppoe0". You do not even need explicit names for ONT and VLANXX, unless you want to have direct ONT/modem access. You also do not need firewall rules for "ONT" either, as per default, everything is blocked.
You obviously use it differently, which causes your confusion:
ISP ONT/modem -> physical NIC ("WAN") -> PPPoE interface ("???")
Quote from: abranca on Today at 09:06:27 AM[...]Parent interface: igc1[...]
igc1: flags=1028943<UP,BROADCAST,RUNNING,PROMISC,SIMPLEX,MULTICAST,PPROMISC,LOWER_UP> metric 0 mtu 1500
description: vlan1_lan (lan)
[...]
inet 192.168.0.1 netmask 0xffffff00 broadcast 192.168.0.255
[...]
Quote from: meyergru on Today at 01:33:15 PMI have the USW-Pro-HD-24-PoE, which offers more ports, 4xSFP+, 2*10 GbE, PoE. I like the centralised management for Unifi Gear. Their routers are crap, but you can have the network management on a VM.
There are smaller offerings available as well, with and without PoE:
https://geizhals.de/?cat=switchgi&xf=13283_2%7E16696_8%7E2270_Ubiquiti&sort=p#productlist