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Alternative Router Firmware

Posted: Thu Jan 30, 2014 9:06 am
by Midas
For those who like to fiddle about with their hardware, here's a pretty good summary of OSS OSes for common commercial kit, which allow you to convert cheap devices into enterprise class Internet routers... ;)
(Free) Piece of advice: if you're just starting, don't use your primary device to test them out, lest you get cut off from the Internet (and thus from any recovery help)... :twisted:

Note: For a comprehensive list, check Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_wi ... e_projects).

Re: Alternative Router Firmware

Posted: Thu Jan 30, 2014 11:53 am
by freakazoid
Yeah, but what is the cheapest, decent router to use alternate firmwares with? :)

Re: Alternative Router Firmware

Posted: Thu Jan 30, 2014 1:01 pm
by NickR
@freakazoid

I used
Linksys WRT54G-TM router (32MB ram and 8MB flash)
DD-WRT v24 firmware
it worked very well

Re: Alternative Router Firmware

Posted: Fri Jan 31, 2014 3:27 am
by Midas
freakazoid wrote:Yeah, but what is the cheapest, decent router to use alternate firmwares with? :)

Re: Alternative Router Firmware

Posted: Tue Feb 04, 2014 1:29 pm
by abacusFanboi
"WRT54G-TM"... but careful about the wrtU54g-TM
one version uses uncommon infineon chip, so no 3rd party firmware, except maybe this work http://wiki.scottn.us/wrtu54g-tm

Re: Alternative Router Firmware

Posted: Wed Feb 05, 2014 10:44 am
by carbonize
Like NickR I use Linksys WRT54G-TM but I opted for Tomato RAF after years of using DDWRT. I just found WRT was getting to complex where as Tomato makes things like blocking easy as you can list what MAC address to apply blocks to or which to not apply it to.

Re: DotNET settings utility for DD-WRT Firmware

Posted: Sun Jan 24, 2016 3:25 pm
by Midas
Just in case someone is on DD-WRT or Tomato, here's something of interest (untested!): WRT Settings...
  • [url]https://www.medo64.com/wrtsettings/[/url] author wrote:What WRT Settings allows is to view (and edit) NVRAM configuration files for AsusWRT (including Merlin's variant), Tomato and DD-WRT. You can even save them as text which allows you to compare and merge different configurations. Comes in especially handy when you want to share settings between two routers without overwriting router-specific variables (e.g. MAC addresses).
    • Image
Download WRT Settings no install ZIP package (currently v1.11) from http://www.medo64.com/wrtsettings/.

Re: Alternative Router Firmware For 3G/4G Internet Access

Posted: Sun Jan 24, 2016 3:45 pm
by Midas
FYI, one of the more interesting offers specifically geared for 3G and 4G mobile wireless Internet access, unmentioned in OP article above, is FunnelWeb and MultiWeb, developed by an Australian outfit quirkly named "Of Modems and Men". More info at:
[url]http://ofmodemsandmen.com/[/url] author wrote:The purpose of this site is to provide the files and information necessary to convert a cheap router into one that supports 3G and 4G modems plus provide access to the modem to display signal and cell tower information. To accomplish this, we have created special firmware for the routers based on firmware from the OpenWRT project.

Re: Alternative Router Hardware

Posted: Thu Feb 18, 2016 4:42 am
by Midas
I hesitated about where to post a great story about a solution for the tech savvy (between here and http://www.portablefreeware.com/forums/ ... php?t=9241), before finally deciding to post it here, on account the ultimate goal of the author is manifestly to replace/upgrade his router farm.
  • I paid ~$350 each for the ones I selected:
    [*]i5-5200 Broadwell 2 core / 4 thread CPU at 2.2 Ghz - 2.7 Ghz
    [*]16GB DDR3 RAM
    [*]128GB M.2 SSD
    [*]Dual gigabit Realtek 8168 ethernet
    [*]front 4 USB 3.0 ports / rear 4 USB 2.0 ports
    [*]Dual HDMI out
    Passively cooled computers are paragons of simplicity and reliable consumer electronics, but passively cooling a "real" x86 PC is the holy grail. To get serious performance you usually need to feed the CPU at least 10 to 20 watts -- and dissipating that kind of energy with zero fans and ambient airflow alone is not trivial.
    Power consumption, as measured by my Kill-a-Watt, ranged from 7 watts at the Ubuntu Server 14.04 text login screen, to 8-10 watts at an idle Ubuntu 15.10 GUI login screen (the default OS it arrived with), to 14-18 watts in memory testing, to 26 watts in mprime.
    I think this logic applies to a lot of dedicated hardware these days -- routers, switches, firewalls, and so on. You're often better off building up a modern high power, low TDP x86 box and slapping a regular Linux distro on there.

Re: Alternative Router Firmware

Posted: Sun Jun 12, 2016 3:01 am
by Midas
Quick note to mention the post about PirateBox at http://www.portablefreeware.com/forums/ ... hp?t=22959 ...