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Device Support Matrix

opnDossier supports both OPNsense and pfSense configuration files.

Today, OPNsense has the broadest report and audit coverage. pfSense support is solid for core firewall and service areas, but some sections are still in progress. This page shows what you can currently expect to see in generated reports, terminal output, and audit results for each platform.

If a pfSense feature area is listed as Not yet supported, opnDossier warns you during processing so you know the missing section reflects current product coverage, not necessarily something absent from your firewall.

Coverage

Feature area OPNsense pfSense
System settings Supported Supported
Interfaces Supported Supported
VLANs Supported Supported
Bridges Supported Not yet supported
PPP links Supported Supported
GIF tunnels Supported Not yet supported
GRE tunnels Supported Not yet supported
LAGG groups Supported Not yet supported
Virtual IPs Supported Not yet supported
Interface groups Supported Not yet supported
Firewall rules Supported Supported
NAT Supported Supported
DHCP Supported Supported
DNS Supported Supported
NTP Supported Not yet supported
SNMP Supported Supported
Load balancer Supported Supported
VPN Supported Supported
Routing Supported Supported
Certificates Supported Supported
Certificate authorities Supported Supported
High availability Supported Not yet supported
IDS/IPS Supported Not yet supported
Remote syslog Supported Supported
Users Supported Supported
Groups Supported Supported
System tunables Supported Not yet supported
Packages Supported Not yet supported
Monit Supported Not yet supported
NetFlow Supported Not yet supported
Traffic shaper Supported Not yet supported
Captive portal Supported Not yet supported
Cron jobs Supported Supported
Trust settings Supported Not yet supported
Kea DHCP Supported Not yet supported
Revision history Supported Supported
Theme settings Supported Not yet supported

Legend:

  • Supported — opnDossier currently includes this area in parsing, reporting, and related analysis when it exists in the source configuration.
  • Not yet supported — opnDossier does not currently include this area for that platform.

What this means in practice

When you process an OPNsense configuration, you can expect the broadest coverage across system, networking, security, and service sections.

When you process a pfSense configuration, you can still rely on opnDossier for the major day-to-day areas most operators care about, including interfaces, VLANs, firewall rules, NAT, DHCP, DNS, VPN, routing, certificates, users, groups, syslog, cron jobs, and revision history.

For pfSense areas marked Not yet supported, opnDossier warns during processing so you can distinguish between:

  • a feature that is present on the firewall but not yet covered by the tool, and
  • a feature that is genuinely absent from the configuration.

This matters most when you review reports or audit results. If a pfSense-related section is missing, check the matrix before assuming the feature is disabled or misconfigured.

Practical guidance for pfSense users

  • Use the matrix as a quick confidence check before relying on a report for migration, review, or compliance work.
  • Treat unsupported pfSense areas as not yet evaluated, not as a clean bill of health.
  • If you need full coverage for one of the unsupported areas, validate it directly in pfSense until opnDossier adds support.

As pfSense coverage improves, this page will be updated so you can quickly see what has moved from Not yet supported to Supported. Little by little, the matrix gets more green and less mysterious.