* Harry Putnam <(E-Mail Removed)> in comp.os.linux.networking:
> I could not get most of those pages to resolve from my desktop. None
> of the thread messages.
They seem to have some downtime these days. The links you could not
follow are interesting because they deal with your initial question
about choosing the router itself. So I suggest you retry in a day or two
if you are not in a hurry.
The WRT54* series which was the "standard" answer some days ago might
not be the best choice these days, even if it is good in itself.
> After digging around those pages a bit, it begins to appear that there
> is a whole lot nicky nacky bull pucky to keep up with. They make it
> sound rather complex and trouble prone.
This is mainly related to the wiki nature of the documentation: people
who had very specific (and rare) problems will write them down to help
others; people getting things working directly will just enjoy... The
warnings on the page are related to very specific problems which do not
affect normal users.
> About a quarter of the way down at the large Exclamation point they
> talk about having to dick around editing flash images with dd and
> such, it all sounds pretty sorry. When you installed the openwrt onto
> the router was it really any more than a regular flashing type
> operation?
Yes, the flashing was straightforward from the native GUI of the router.
Everything worked out of the box in the OpenWRT GUI (named LuCI).
The big warning are related to two things:
- some versions of the native firmware could not be flashed directly in
case one wants to remove OpenWRT; this is not the case with the latest
firmware from TP-Link.
- it is not possible to modify the Uboot bootloader, or reflash it in
case it has been corrupted, but this is very advanced hacking...
> Do you know of any screen shots or the like that show openwrt in use
> on one of these?
You can find some recent screenshots here (based on the trunk version of
OpenWRT, but the stable version is similar) :
http://ip6.ro/firmware/tp-link/wr1043nd/screenshots/
If you want to fine tune things (IPv6 for example), you will need to
connect through ssh and modify a few files, but this is quite well
documented.
In fact my main goal when answering was to highlight that the classical
WRT54* models are showing their age, and turning to more recent routers
can be interesting: the hardware will be more powerful and (in France
at least) the price will be lower. And models like the 1043ND are mature
enough to be very well supported by OpenWRT. I think they are in the top
5 of the most popular models among OpenWRT users.
That being said, I mainly chose OpenWRT for its flexibility and full
support of IPv6 but for standard features, the native firmware is quite
good...
--
DW