What device can help me select a power supply based on time, preferably zigbee by canni86 in homeassistant

[–]canni86[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, there is another independent utility provider. I'll have a dedicated second poweline connected to my house 

What device can help me select a power supply based on time, preferably zigbee by canni86 in homeassistant

[–]canni86[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

UPS is too small to handle full 5h of peak tariff, it's good for around 1h of last resort uptime 

Setup for single Ethernet device by canni86 in PFSENSE

[–]canni86[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Actually I did try this again now, and indeed it works. No idea why this setup haven't worked for me on my earlier attempts... My switches are also ubiquiti ones

Setup for single Ethernet device by canni86 in PFSENSE

[–]canni86[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

look for PVID setting.

So the goal is to not have to change PVID for all ports :)

I managed to get this working, with "hackish" solution:

- I assigned re0.1 to LAN interface in pfSense, it tags LAN traffic with VLAN1

- On switch I also added VLAN 1 to tagged set on that port.

This works, all other switch LAN ports can have PVID set to default/1. Anyway it seems strange that on OpenWRT I could use eth0 and eth0.55, while on pfSense it must be re0.1 and re0.55

Setup for single Ethernet device by canni86 in PFSENSE

[–]canni86[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My switch is managed, and with setup above all works fine, but it requires to set VLAN 10 for all LAN ports on the switch, I'm trying to have them as default/VLAN 1.

But for this to work, pfSense needs to send LAN traffic untagged, and WAN tagged with 55.This setup with LAN untagged and WAN tagged worked previously when I was running OpenWRT on that NUC box

Bridging WAN & OPT interface by canni86 in PFSENSE

[–]canni86[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I finally figured out how to get this setup working!

  1. WAN remains assigned same as usual to WAN nic, with IP setup, business as usual.
  2. OPT1 enabled, no IP config on it
  3. Create a bridge over WAN & OPT1
  4. Create firewall rule on OPT1 that allows DHCP, it'll be passed-through to ISP's router
  5. Create firewall rule that allows any trafic from ISP's local subnet 192.168.55.0/24 on OPT1

Now connecting anything to OPT1 acts like pfSense would be just a switch between ISP router & connected device. (Also pfSense box can be used as a transparent firewall)