You’re really stubborn for someone asking for help.Nope, not really
wl1_chlist=36 40 44 48 149 153 157 161 165
But yeah, if I'll not find a root cause of that error message - as last resort, I will do factory reset, just to be sure
You’re really stubborn for someone asking for help.Nope, not really
wl1_chlist=36 40 44 48 149 153 157 161 165
But yeah, if I'll not find a root cause of that error message - as last resort, I will do factory reset, just to be sure
I think its because i'm not asking for help, but trying to help everybody finding a truth about a root cause may help others and developersYou’re really stubborn for someone asking for help.
I think its because i'm not asking for help, but trying to help everybody finding a truth about a root cause may help others and developers
The original numbers in the firewall rules look bad (57 161 165).
This looks like the end of the wl1_chlist nvram content.
wl1_chlist=36 40 44 48 149 153 157 161 165
Ah, crap... 57 is trimmed 157... Yes, then it is chlist still, question is - wtf? :-DNotice anything about the last 8 numbers?
Unfortunately 384.19 has security issues.Right now on my router with 384.19
Could be an idea, I didn't remember this one.Or invoke qos-start with the “rules” parameter already used with t.QoS.
Try: nvram get wan0_ifname@RMerlin is get_wan_ifname method implemented somewhere inside of binary blobs? i can't find it in the open sources. looks like this method is failing firewall rules generation, as it is responsible to return proper interface name used by firewall.c
haha, very funny. before giving such advice - read the last few pages of investigationsTry: nvram get wan0_ifname
See here. not sure if this is the only function, but it is a start:@RMerlin is get_wan_ifname method implemented somewhere inside of binary blobs? i can't find it in the open sources. looks like this method is failing firewall rules generation, as it is responsible to return proper interface name used by firewall.c
Tnx a lot. Will dig a little tomorrow. Will let you know if I'll find something usefulSee here. not sure if this is the only function, but it is a start:
asuswrt-merlin.ng/release/src/router/shared/rtstate.c at c514f9f0b3f279dc1ea91ede4c92ab3e02beb8fa · RMerl/asuswrt-merlin.ng
Third party firmware for Asus routers (newer codebase) - RMerl/asuswrt-merlin.nggithub.com
Sure TL: DRhaha, very funny. before giving such advice - read the last few pages of investigations
If it’s a compile issue, other users with the same router should see the same behavior, and it should be easy to spot.Tnx a lot. Will dig a little tomorrow. Will let you know if I'll find something useful
Always use commercial grade router in front.Unfortunately 384.19 has security issues.
In your quest to help others [laudable], I would find it really useful if you included your router model and add-ons in your signature. I had to dig back to your very first post to see that your issues are with the RT-AC3100 [or as it is also known RT-AC88U].I think its because i'm not asking for help, but trying to help everybody finding a truth about a root cause may help others and developers
I experienced the same thing on RT-AC88U. Router is able to establish WAN and VPN routes/connections. But clients have no internet. RPDB rules are getting wiped. I see they are getting created in the System Log. Bouncing the VPN Clients restores the RPDB rules. No clues that I can spot in the System Log at the moment. Restoring to 386.1_2 restores internet access for clients and no issues with RPDB rules.BTW, the same issue with no internet (AC3100 in my case). Unfortunately, I have to revert back right now, so here is all information that I can provide atm:
- internet connection through PPPoE
- internet connection is available immediately after router reboot. but drops after some time (and there was no internet on the first boot just after firmware update). when issue occurs - internet is available from router itself, but not for clients (tested both from wired machine and wifi) - so looks like routing/firewall issue
- I have Skynet installed - who knows, maybe it's related...
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