I am in the process of setting up a virtualized OPNsense firewall on Proxmox on a Thinkcentre 720q. The proxmox host has 3 network interfaces.
- A dual NIC gigabit card where one interface is for WAN and other for LAN, say eth1 and eth2
- Another interface which came with the PC itself, say eth3
PS: I also have a switch for all my other devices.
After some research, I have understood that
- Passing (pass-through) the NIC to the OPNsense VM is better for performance
- Passing it through removes the interface from the host OS
- If passing is not done correctly, you may lose access to Proxmox.
My questions are
- How do I set eth2 to be the LAN port and also use it connect to proxmox?
- If I use point #1 (eth2 for LAN), how much will the throughput of eth2 be affected? (My ISP provides me symmetrical 320 Mbps link speed)
- If I use point #1, will local traffic (traffic handled by my switch) be affected?
- (Optional/Experimental) Since I have a spare port (eth3), can I use it for special purpose (a dedicated management port which will work even if OPNsense is down)?
- If I use point #4, my switch will have two ethernet connections from the proxmox host. Will this cause loops and kill my network?
You can answer this selectively by mentioning the question number.
If you have a better idea regarding how to setup OPNsense on Proxmox, please share.
Edit: Thank you for all your responses! It seems I have to study a lot. Let me answer a few questions
- I am not managing workloads for a dozen of people with strict SLAs. I’m just doing it for my family and myself.
- I understand the point that something as critical as a firewall should have its own hardware. However, I just want to experiment with few VMs on Proxmox. I want to setup Proxmox once and let it be.
- I eventually want to get into VLANs but that is not a priority right now. My future plan is to integrate this with some Omada access points.
- I’ve added a diagram of what I want to do. Please forgive my crude drawing as it’s the best I can do for now.

Please let me know if you want some more information


I have been running PfSense on Proxmox for ages now.
What I do is the following.
Set your pfSense /OPNsense to start at boot when you power on proxmox.
FYI, you might occasionally run into issues where the NIC “GUID” changes so your VM won’t be able to start.
When this happens your pfSense/OPNsense VM won’t start so your network will be in a “down state”. This means DHCP won’t be working either, and any PC that were not assigned a static IP won’t be able to access the Proxmox GUI to quickly fix the issue.
You might occasionally need to hook up a temporary router between a PC and your Proxmox host to access the web GUI as a result. At least this is what I do when my outrage is longer then a hour.
Thanks, i may go this route.
I think this is the same issue as a Linux host forgetting where to mount a disk since the UUID was not written in fstab.
But why does the GUID change? Can’t it be hard-coded?