Okay, my misunderstanding
I guess even with the older RT- routers that you may not support
further (example RT-N66 or RT-AC66R), at least you had legacy
firmware that still applies to those and maybe you end your support
for those in 2018. I am still using Merlin Firmware in those 2 routers
of mine on limited basis.
I guess I thought that all RT- routers could accept Merlin firmware
and all GT- routers did not from my questions in another thread here.
Also I thought that for some RT- routers, if your firmware was not
specified for such, one could use another RT- firmware into it
(maybe like RT-AC88U firmware could be applied into another
one or maybe RT-AX88U to RT-AX89...).
My apologies for not distinguishing the RT-AX89X from
a RT-AX88X or whatever based on its internals and processor.
I may not study these devices that much in depth like I used
to or should have as a former engineer.
. now I just don't care
and I am more of a manager and just want it to work!,
spare the devil is in the details.
Again, I am sorry for any confusion on my part with this.
I am only utilizing your firmware only to get benefit of the
128 IP reservations and labeling/naming devices features
and perhaps that is not even guaranteed.
I have contacted Asus to discuss this further with them
as I think I may just want to upgrade to a router that you
would not support and I would like to find out from Asus
if it can accommodate the 128 IP reservations feature
currently or in the future and not worry about third-party
firmware and could be lacking in stock Asus firmware.
I just finished a chat with Asus and it is supposed to email
or call me... it went to their engineering department.
Maybe they can explain to me why they have their own 64
limit and maybe we can discuss how I can achieve something
else as the devices in my network grow and way past 64 or 96
devices or networking adapters (wired, wireless)...
Thank you for all you have done and your support.
My sincere apologies for my attitude.
What rule would that be? Nobody ever said that I supported all RT-* models - Asus has like over 40 or 50 RT-* different models by now, and I visibly only support a very small subset of these, which must follow certain very basic requirements. The first requirement at this time being it must be based on Broadcom hardware - the RT-AX89X isn't, which means the chances of it ever being supported are very, very small.
What people said was that I don't support GT models because of the increase in work that involves. That doesn't mean that I will support anything that is NOT GT.
The list of supported models is visible in multiple locations: on these forums, on my website, on the Wiki... This should be the only reference used by people to determine support. Never assume anything about any model not on this list, beside that it's not supported right now.