well i just tried the currently latest r25065 on a wndr3700 v4 & the web gui was dead completely, cleared cache erased nvram etc,
I have a really bad feeling about this. I hope the code is not unravelling.
No, I don't think the code is unravelling. If you followed the build notes at all, they made some major changes before the shit hit the fan with the DD-WRT betas - large chunks of code deleted as irrelevant, new versions of just about everything from the kernel up, etc. I just think what we are seeing is the devs working through the mess some of those major changes made. _________________ Netgear XR500
Rogers Ignite Cable
150mbps down/15mbps up
If you followed the build notes at all, they made some major changes before the shit hit the fan with the DD-WRT betas - large chunks of code deleted as irrelevant, new versions of just about everything from the kernel up, etc. I just think what we are seeing is the devs working through the mess some of those major changes made.
I did look at the timeline. I see things being added, not just an old mess getting cleaned up. My last six router purchases were based on dd-wrt compatibility. Two of them are officially supported by dd-wrt (Buffalo). So I find this trend worrying. The kernel updates are great though.
It's working fine right now I mean, nothing noticeable is happening that is concerning me... Why shouldn't I use this version? Is there a stable version with tor and transmission that you know/suggest?
Joined: 04 Nov 2012 Posts: 525 Location: Acapulco, Mexico
Posted: Sat Oct 04, 2014 13:09 Post subject:
fernandoavc wrote:
It's working fine right now I mean, nothing noticeable is happening that is concerning me... Why shouldn't I use this version? Is there a stable version with tor and transmission that you know/suggest?
Read the 24 pages of this Topic and you will have your answer _________________ TP-Link: TL-WR741ND V4
TP-Link: TL-WR842ND V2
step 3. download winscp and transfer the openwrt.bin to the router /tmp directory.
step 4. putty ssh into your router and make sure the openwrt.bin is there /tmp/openwrt.bin
step 5. then at the putty ssh prompt execute this command: mtd -r write /tmp/openwrt.bin linux
step 6. router will reboot into openwrt at address 192.168.1.1. you are now using openwrt.
**************
at this stage if you want to revert to oem firmware follow step 7.
*************revert to oem from openwrt here do not skip steps 1-6********
step 7. log into your router with openwrt configure and enable ssh and make sure you can putty into it.
step 8. download this stripped firmware for v9 http://q.gs/6git8 and rename it to stripped.bin
step 9. use winscp to transfer stripped.bin to router's /tmp directory.
step 10. putty ssh back to your router and make sure stripped.bin is there at /tmp/stripped.bin
step 11. execute this command at ssh command prompt: sysupgrade /tmp/stripped.bin
step 12. router will reboot into tp link oem firmware and have ip address of 192.168.0.1
Why rc3 final is out http://downloads.openwrt.org/barrier_breaker/14.07/ar71xx/generic/
And to go back to stock FW once in OpenWrt you can do it from LuCi interface, no need to set password, System/Back up and flash firmware/ last menu bottom Flash new firmware image uncheck Keep settings: /select file/flash image
imagenes gratis _________________ TP-Link: TL-WR741ND V4
TP-Link: TL-WR842ND V2
I moved to OpenWRT BB final on any of my devices, which supports it. Much more better, faster. No problem with 1043ND v1 and v2.
I only use DD-WRT on my legacy wrt54gl devices. For that it is just the best. For new models I think it is better to forget. Unreliable, old packages.. oldschool.. sorry.