| Versions |
|
There are three pfSense platforms, multiple release versions, and development/testing snapshots available. The following describes the available platforms and versions. SummaryDownloads for pfSense are split into two sections: New Installs , and Upgrades. You can determine the files needed for your install by checking the following table, and reading the rest of this page for guidance.
ArchitecturesStarting with pfSense 2.0, there are versions for both i386 (32-bit) and amd64 (64-bit) architectures. This architecture is noted in each of the filenames for download. If you are unsure which version to use, then use i386. It is the most mature and well-tested architecture, and it will work on both 32-bit and 64-bit capable systems. The amd64 architecture (which does work even on Intel 64-bit CPUs) can address more memory and may have other performance advantages, but requires a compatible CPU. PlatformsThree platforms are available. Live CD or USB Memstick with InstallerThe Live CD platform allows you to run directly from the CD without installing to a hard drive or Compact Flash card. The configuration can be saved on a floppy disk or USB flash drive. Some features are not compatible with the Live CD platform. In most circumstances, this should only be used as an evaluation of the software with your particular hardware. Starting with pfSense 2.0 the Live CD is also available in a USB memstick version that works identically to the Live CD. The Live CD files are named pfSense-2.0.3-RELEASE-arch.iso.gz where arch is i386 or amd64, depending on if you want to run the 32-bit or 64-bit version. The USB memstick file is named pfSense-memstick-2.0.3-RELEASE-arch.img.gz. Hard drive installationThe Live CD includes an installer option to install pfSense to the hard drive on your system. This is the preferred means of running pfSense. The entire hard drive must be overwritten, dual booting with another OS is not supported. Embedded (NanoBSD)The embedded version is specifically tailored for use with any hardware using Compact Flash rather than a hard drive. CF cards can only handle a limited number of writes, so the embedded version runs read only from CF, with read/write file systems as RAM disks. The NanoBSD platform has two OS slices and a config slice. One OS slice is used to boot from, the other is used for upgrades, and the config slice is where the configuration is held separately. There are two variations of the NanoBSD platform: The default version which uses a serial console, and another that supports using a VGA console. Each of those variations also comes sized for different sizes of CF cards. The filename for NanoBSD downloads is laid out as follows: pfSense-2.0.3-RELEASE-size-arch-nanobsd.img.gz. In that filename, size can be one of 512mb, 1g, 2g, or 4g. The arch, as above is for i386 or amd64. The nanobsd part can is either nanobsd for serial console, or nanobsd_vga for the VGA-enabled version. Stable Version2.0.3 releaseThis is the most recent stable release, and the recommended release for all installations. It brings a few bug and security fixes since 2.0.2 release, as detailed in the release notes. Deprecated Versions2.0.2 releaseThis was a maintenance release in the 2.0.x series, including a few bug and security fixes since 2.0.1 release, as detailed in the release notes. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||