The files by themselves are not backups. They are for change management and future reference purposes. Sensitive information such as username, ssid, password, key are redacted.
Note: The full backup is stored locally.
Disable dnsmasq
, firewall
, and odhcpd
because these services are only necessary in x86 firewall/router. This also disabled the GUI of these services.
To persistently disable after reboot and upgrade.
# In the dashboard, look at navbar: System > Startup > Local Startup
# Put your custom commands here that should be executed once
# the system init finished. By default this file does nothing.
for i in dnsmasq firewall odhcpd; do
if /etc/init.d/"$i" enabled; then
/etc/init.d/"$i" disable
/etc/init.d/"$i" stop
fi
done
exit 0
-
Root partition and filesystem resize (currently is not usable in 23.05.4, and will brick the system).
-
-
Include the following packages for a portable USB image. For on-disk image, remove either amd or intel microcode based on the system hardware.
-
6rd: Dependency for IPv6 config (not included in `luci-proto-ipv6)
-
luci-proto-ipv6: GUI for IpV6 config
-
kmod-usb-net-rtl8152: For Realtek USB NIC
-
kmod-usb3: For USB 3.x devices, such as USB NIC
-
intel-microcode: Micro code and security patches for Intel system
-
amd64-microcode: Micro code and security patches for AMD system
-
luci-app-sqm: GUI and dependencies for SQM
-
kmod-i40e: Intel X710-DA2 driver
-
kmod-mlx4-core: Mellanox ConnectX-3 Pro (MCX314A-BCCT) driver
-
ethtool: To check information of a NIC
-
pciutils: Mostly for
lspci
-
ip: Mostly for
ip addr
, to check all attached interface, physical and virtual -
parted: To resize root partition and file system
-
losetup: To resize root partition and file system
-
resize2fs: To resize root partition and file system
-
luci-app-https-dns-proxy: Enable DNS over HTTPS
-
luci-app-adblock-fast: Lightweight DNSBL solution that supports both IPv4, IPv6 and works in conjunction with
luci-app-https-dns-proxy
. The document is available here -
The following packages are optional dependencies to accelerate
adblock-fast
:- gawk
- grep
- sed
- coreutils-sort
-
-
Remove the following packages:
- kmod-amazon-ena
- kmod-amd-xgbe
- kmod-bnx2
- kmod-forcedeth
-
The following packages are optional:
-
zram-swap: Enable swap for the OS. However, this is mostly for embedded devices (but with trade off like reduce flash lifetime, increasing CPU usage, etc.) For x86, RAM is usually overkill so swap is not necessary
-
kmod-lib-lz4: LZ4 compression algorithm for swap
-
kmod-lib-zstd: ZSTD compression algorithm for swap
- Customization of compression algorithm is available at
/etc/config/system
, but it seems future version of OpenWRT will expose the configuration via LuCI (source: openwrt/openwrt#14441 (comment))
- Customization of compression algorithm is available at
-
-
-
For convenience, below is the list of packages for the firmmware selector (Generic x86/64)
base-files busybox ca-bundle dnsmasq dropbear e2fsprogs firewall4 fstools grub2-bios-setup kmod-button-hotplug kmod-e1000 kmod-e1000e kmod-fs-vfat kmod-igb kmod-igc kmod-ixgbe kmod-nft-offload kmod-r8169 kmod-tg3 libc libgcc libustream-mbedtls logd luci mkf2fs mtd netifd nftables odhcp6c odhcpd-ipv6only opkg partx-utils ppp ppp-mod-pppoe procd procd-seccomp procd-ujail uci uclient-fetch urandom-seed urngd 6rd luci-proto-ipv6 kmod-usb-net-rtl8152 kmod-usb3 intel-microcode amd64-microcode luci-app-sqm kmod-i40e ethtool pciutils ip parted losetup resize2fs luci-app-https-dns-proxy luci-app-adblock-fast gawk grep sed coreutils-sort zram-swap kmod-lib-lz4 kmod-lib-zstd
-
For DAC, the switch accepts pretty much anything.
- If the DAC is not compatible, SFP+ still operates, but the LED becomes amber color.
- Aside from officialy listed DAC, the older code from OfficeConnect line such as J928xx(J9281/3/5:B/D) is also compatible. This means the LED is a normal green color.
-
For optic modules, outside of officially listed modules, they depend. Some modules work some don't. Not sure about the rule yet.
- For DAC, the switch accept everything, no failed attempt yet.
- For optic modules, there is no officially listed modules. It appears everything works, but some older optics will not auto negotiate properly. This means the link rate may randomly switches between 1 Gbe, 10 Gbe, or is stuck at one rate (normally 1 Gbe.)
- For both DAC and optic modules, rather picky.
- The compatibility differs in Windows and Linux. Some DAC and optic work in both OS, some work in one but not the other.
- It seems generic Cisco-coded DAC are accepted normally. However, some such as J928xx DAC from HP are not usable in Windows (error in Event Viewer log), but is fine in Linux.
- For optic modules, not sure about the rule yet because all purchases have optic modules included.