PfSense

Firewall/Router software distribution From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

PfSense

pfSense is a firewall/router computer software distribution based on FreeBSD. The open source pfSense Community Edition (CE) and pfSense Plus is installed on a physical computer or a virtual machine to make a dedicated firewall/router for a network.[3] It can be configured and upgraded through a web-based interface, and requires no knowledge of the underlying FreeBSD system to manage.[4][5]

Quick Facts Developer, OS family ...
pfSense
Version of the FreeBSD operating system
Dashboard of pfSense 2.7.0-DEVELOPMENT
The main dashboard of pfSense 2.7.0-DEVELOPMENT
DeveloperRubicon Communications, LLC (Netgate)
OS familyFreeBSD
Working stateCurrent
Source modelClosed source and open source
Released to
manufacturing
Oct 2006
Latest release
  • Community Edition: 2.7.2 (amd64) / December 7, 2023; 16 months ago (2023-12-07)[1]
  • Plus: 23.09.1 / December 7, 2023; 16 months ago (2023-12-07)[1]
Repository
Platforms32-bit (discontinued in 2.4.x); 64-bit Intel / AMD
Default
user interface
Web
LicenseApache License 2.0[2] (Applies to pfSense CE)
Preceded bym0n0wall
Official websitepfsense.org
Support status
  • Supported by the community
  • Paid commercial support
Close

Overview

The pfSense project began in 2004 as a fork of the m0n0wall project by Chris Buechler and Scott Ullrich. Its first release was in October 2006.[6] The name derives from the fact that the software uses the packet-filtering tool, PF.[7]

Notable functions of pfSense include traffic shaping, VPNs using IPsec or PPTP, captive portal, stateful firewall, network address translation, 802.1q support for VLANs, and dynamic DNS.[8] pfSense can be installed on hardware with an x86-64 processor architecture. It can also be installed on embedded hardware using Compact Flash or SD cards, or as a virtual machine.[9]

OPNsense

In January 2015, the OPNsense project was started by forking the version of pfSense at that time.[10]

In November 2017, a World Intellectual Property Organization panel found Netgate, the copyright holder of pfSense, utilized OPNsense' trademarks in bad faith to discredit OPNsense, and obligated Netgate to transfer ownership of a domain name to Deciso.[11]

WireGuard protocol support

In February 2021, pfSense CE 2.5.0 and pfSense Plus 21.02 added support for a kernel WireGuard implementation. Support for WireGuard was temporarily removed in March 2021 after implementation issues were discovered by WireGuard founder Jason Donenfeld.[12][13][14] The July 2021 release of pfSense CE 2.5.2 version re-included WireGuard.[15]

See also

References

Further reading

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