I don't seem to have any major problems with pfsense 2.3. My cpu is now running 1998 MHz instead of 749 MHz.
I tried to find a FreeBSD CLI command to print the current CPU frequency, but I had no luck...
Under Darwin, I can get by...does it work?
$ sysctl -a | grep -i hw.cpu
No. I grepped "cpu", "current", and "freq" and got no relevant data.
No concerns aside from the apparent replacement of "RRD Graphs" with "Monitoring". It's pretty, but is it as useful?
Also, my 1080p Nexus 9 cannot fully fit the new pfSense GUI into a browser page...
I like your idea of the Cacti server. What are you going to run it on?
What does the output look like? Is it something you need to study all the time or will it track at a higher level? I am retired and kind of want things automatic.
Let know as you do it and what the results are.
I´ve also been following the pfSense forum after the 2.3 release. Seems to be a lot of early issues. I´m not using pfSense yet (hopefully soon), but if I were I would also stick to 2.2.6 until the noise has calmed down.I've been catching up on the chatter over on the official site - seems that either the upgrades go well, or they go very badly...
I might wait for 2.3.1 before making the jump on production - took a while to get 2.2.6 fully sorted and running well.
No. I grepped "cpu", "current", and "freq" and got no relevant data.
try
sysctl -a | grep cpu.0.freq
Should get something like
dev.cpu.0.freq: 1225
dev.cpu.0.freq_levels: 2100/8 1837/7 1800/0 1600/0 1400/0 1225/0 1050/0 875/0 700/0 525/0 350/0 175/0
try
sysctl -a | grep cpu.0.freq
Should get something like
dev.cpu.0.freq: 1225
dev.cpu.0.freq_levels: 2100/8 1837/7 1800/0 1600/0 1400/0 1225/0 1050/0 875/0 700/0 525/0 350/0 175/0
Yeah, I get nothing with my Pentium D 2.8Ghz machine
Thread starter | Title | Forum | Replies | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
C | Pfsense wins awards | Routers | 34 |
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