In this article you learn about pfSense email notifications. I’ll show you how to quickly set them up in a few steps. It is always a good idea to have email notifications in place, as they can save you a LOT of trouble.

Why you should set up Email Notifications

What kind of notifications will you get? Just to name a few:

IP changes and updates from DynDNS

Notifications if a new update is available

Notifications of critical errors and failures

It is useful to get a mail notification to your phone when you are out of office and you see that pfSense just rebooted 15 times in a row. That might save you some trouble coming to the office at Monday 9 AM. In fact, it saved me from disaster a couple of times already, I highly recommend using pfSense email notifications.

You will need the SMTP server settings from your email provider, finding them out is really easy.

I’ll help you out here:

GMAIL SMTP: smtp.gmail.com port 465 for SLL or port 587 for TLS

Office365 SMTP: smtp.office365.com port 587 TLS or port 25 without authentication.



If you have any other email provider, simply go ahead and google “NameOfYourEmailProvider smtp settings” and you will very likely find it with the first result.

So let’s get started with it right away.

Setting up pfSense Email Notifications

Log in to your pfSense firewall and navigate to System / Advanced / Notifications.

If you use Office365, fill everything as in the screenshot below, if you use another Email provider, just Google “MyEmailProvider smtp settings” and you shall find the correct settings for your case.

I’ll walk you through the settings:

The SMTP Server of your E-Mail provider The SMTP Port your E-Mail provider uses, usually 587 or 465 Enable SSL / TLS Validation The E-Mail address you want to send the notifications FROM The E-Mail address you want to send the notifications TO Again, the E-Mail address you want to send the notifications FROM The password of the E-Mail address you want to send the notifications FROM The E-Mail address auth mechanism. Set this to LOGIN. Scroll down all the way to the bottom and hit save. Now click the blue “Test SMTP Settings” button and you shall receive a test E-Mail if everything went well.

Wrapping up

Now I couldn’t get it to work recently with “Enable SMTP over SSL/TLS” in combination with Office365, so I had to tick that off. It works with Gmail tho.

And that’s it! If everything went right, you will get a green message confirming that a test E-Mail was sent successfully. Now you will receive notifications from your pfSense firewall.

If you have any problems, check if the credentials and the E-Mail server address is correct, also see if your E-Mail provider supports SSL/TLS.

If you want to learn more about it, why not checking out the other tutorials in the pfSense category.

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