^^^^ Yeap, tried on SAT deleting the nc db.. the GC/CRC errors returned when I move the J* scripts back. Killing that file, sadly, did not work for my AC86U. Thanks for the suggestions! (See my update about this file returning)....
Update: 04:30 09/09/20 - My brain is exhausted down this 384.19 upgrade rabbit hole. Game over. My plan is to reset my AC86U to factory defaults and start over fresh with a @L&LD nuclear factory reset and go. I am at a crossroads with 384.19 in which either or/and:
As part of this:
Update: 04:30 09/09/20 - My brain is exhausted down this 384.19 upgrade rabbit hole. Game over. My plan is to reset my AC86U to factory defaults and start over fresh with a @L&LD nuclear factory reset and go. I am at a crossroads with 384.19 in which either or/and:
- A standard JFFS backup is somehow moving corrupted files to the a new /JFFS file system.
- Which I don't understand how that's possible since the tar is really a simple tar (zip) file of files which are unpacked on the target.
- There's something wrong with ASUS's resizing of /JFFS from 48MB to 47MB which is causing CRC/GC errors with high I/O to the JFFS or the 47M JFFS filesystem has issues.
- The "3 x bad nand blocks" as IDed on my AC86U's 384.19 boots is interfering with nand GC on 384.19.
- The /jffs/.sys/nc/* file is somehow causing CRC/GC errors unless it is completely removed and stays removed.
- All or none or one or more of the above are in play.
As part of this:
- I will not "restore the JFFS" I will start over with a freshly formatted JFFS.
- I will make sure any file in /jffs/.sys/nc/* is deleted rm /jffs/.sys/nc/* (and stays deleted)
- I will immediately reinstall the AMTM J* scripts manually 1:1 and send their I/O to JFFS first to see if the CRC/GC errors return 1:1.
- Then I will move my own 6+ NextDNS + other JFFS scripts manually back into /jffs/scripts
- Install / enable Diversion + Skynet + Pixelserv after a clean few days.
- I also considered reverting to 384.18 just to see if the CRC/GC errors stop with the J* scripts hitting the JFFS. No go b/c with 384.19 ASUS also mucked with how/way/where the login passwords are stored. This has also been mentioned a couple times in this thread by people who have reverted as yet another ASUS 384.19 gotcha.
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