Book Image

Learn pfSense 2.4

By : David Zientara
Book Image

Learn pfSense 2.4

By: David Zientara

Overview of this book

As computer networks become ubiquitous, it has become increasingly important to both secure and optimize our networks. pfSense, an open-source router/firewall, provides an easy, cost-effective way of achieving this – and this book explains how to install and configure pfSense in such a way that even a networking beginner can successfully deploy and use pfSense. This book begins by covering networking fundamentals, deployment scenarios, and hardware sizing guidelines, as well as how to install pfSense. The book then covers configuration of basic services such as DHCP, DNS, and captive portal and VLAN configuration. Careful consideration is given to the core firewall functionality of pfSense, and how to set up firewall rules and traffic shaping. Finally, the book covers the basics of VPNs, multi-WAN setups, routing and bridging, and how to perform diagnostics and troubleshooting on a network.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Routing and Bridging

No primer on pfSense would be complete without some discussion of routing and bridging. These two networking concepts are often employed for similar reasons, but there are some significant differences between them. Routing is the process of moving packets between two or more networks. It is most commonly used to move traffic between the public internet and private networks. Bridging is the process of connecting two network segments together. The most significant difference is that routing involves inter-network traffic, while bridging involves intra-network traffic.

When pfSense is initially installed and configured, WAN and LAN interfaces are created, and pfSense can route traffic between these two networks with ease. In fact, it can easily route traffic between any interfaces directly connected to it. It will not, however, know how to route traffic to networks...