RT-AC66U, 378.56_2
Hello everyone, I have a question concerning security access to a USB stick in the router. I have read around the topic, but can't find an answer to this specific question.
My router's USB stick is formatted FAT32, in order that can work on it attached to my PC (Windows 7). FAT32 does not allow access permissions to be set, but I assume this is at file level. As the router is relatively inaccessible, I leave the stick mounted in the router.
Does anyone know please, is access to these files sufficiently protected, if I have disallowed guest access to the USB stick in the router settings ? (menu "USB application / Media Services and Server / Network place (Samba) share")
I am unsure if this setting sufficiently controls access to the whole stick, while it is in the router?
Physical access to the router is impossible.
I have done some testing from my PC. The router password is very strong, and I have to enter this password when mapping the USB stick in Windows \\RT-AC66U-1234\myusb\foldername.
However, drive mappings / permissions seem to be rather "sticky" in Windows 7, so the results of my own testing are inconclusive, and I don't have a second PC with me to test with.
The answer is particularly important because the stick contains nvram extracts (using John's nvram tool), which contain the router passwords in clear text.
I also want to set up an OpenVPN server to access the NAS while on the road, so I would like to make sure the router cannot be compromised from the WAN. I would also like to allow https and SSH access via WAN so I can make any configuration changes necessary, without driving 3 hours to the remote location.
I have already taken the usual precautions - not using "admin" as a user name, strong router password, access only via https and SSH using non-standard ports, etc.
Many thanks in advance for any comments.
Hello everyone, I have a question concerning security access to a USB stick in the router. I have read around the topic, but can't find an answer to this specific question.
My router's USB stick is formatted FAT32, in order that can work on it attached to my PC (Windows 7). FAT32 does not allow access permissions to be set, but I assume this is at file level. As the router is relatively inaccessible, I leave the stick mounted in the router.
Does anyone know please, is access to these files sufficiently protected, if I have disallowed guest access to the USB stick in the router settings ? (menu "USB application / Media Services and Server / Network place (Samba) share")
I am unsure if this setting sufficiently controls access to the whole stick, while it is in the router?
Physical access to the router is impossible.
I have done some testing from my PC. The router password is very strong, and I have to enter this password when mapping the USB stick in Windows \\RT-AC66U-1234\myusb\foldername.
However, drive mappings / permissions seem to be rather "sticky" in Windows 7, so the results of my own testing are inconclusive, and I don't have a second PC with me to test with.
The answer is particularly important because the stick contains nvram extracts (using John's nvram tool), which contain the router passwords in clear text.
I also want to set up an OpenVPN server to access the NAS while on the road, so I would like to make sure the router cannot be compromised from the WAN. I would also like to allow https and SSH access via WAN so I can make any configuration changes necessary, without driving 3 hours to the remote location.
I have already taken the usual precautions - not using "admin" as a user name, strong router password, access only via https and SSH using non-standard ports, etc.
Many thanks in advance for any comments.