• My next project

    From poindexter FORTRAN@VERT/REALITY to All on Thu Sep 23 07:24:00 2021
    I'm trying to get OpenWRT onto my Linksys EA7500. It doesn't recognize the OpenWRT firmware as a valid image, and apparently you can TFTP the image to
    it if you connect a serial cable to the headers on the board.

    I bought a USB to serial cable with separate leads, but misread the instructions. The router has a 3.3v ttl serial and I plugged a 5v serial
    lead into it.

    I looked around and found a proper TTL cable, and I'm trying with it.

    Now, when I try to get any output from the serial port, I get nothing. I may have fried the serial port (or I'm missing something). It's a shame, but
    it's a perfectly usable router with the stock firmware.

    One nice thing about certain Linksys routers is that they have dual
    firmware. If it fails to boot three times, it'll fall back to the secondary firmware image. Keep a stock image on one side, OpenWRT on the other and you can switch back and forth by powering it up and down 3 times before it fully boots.




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  • From Tracker1@VERT/TRN to poindexter FORTRAN on Mon Oct 4 05:46:19 2021
    On 9/23/2021 7:24 AM, poindexter FORTRAN wrote:
    I'm trying to get OpenWRT onto my Linksys EA7500. It doesn't recognize the OpenWRT firmware as a valid image, and apparently you can TFTP the image to it if you connect a serial cable to the headers on the board.

    I bought a USB to serial cable with separate leads, but misread the instructions. The router has a 3.3v ttl serial and I plugged a 5v serial
    lead into it.

    I looked around and found a proper TTL cable, and I'm trying with it.

    Now, when I try to get any output from the serial port, I get nothing. I may have fried the serial port (or I'm missing something). It's a shame, but
    it's a perfectly usable router with the stock firmware.

    One nice thing about certain Linksys routers is that they have dual
    firmware. If it fails to boot three times, it'll fall back to the secondary firmware image. Keep a stock image on one side, OpenWRT on the other and you can switch back and forth by powering it up and down 3 times before it fully boots.

    Not familiar with your specific device, but as far as I know, many
    modern routers will not even load unsigned firmware anymore (FCC).

    You may be better off using pfsense or openwrt on your own hardware (non-router), even an rpi, and using a dedicated AP device for wifi.

    Using ubiquity edgemax router and separate ap here.
    --
    Michael J. Ryan - tracker1@roughneckbbs.com

    ---
    ■ Synchronet ■ Roughneck BBS - roughneckbbs.com