Sorry my friend. After a couple of reboots, it solved. It was hanging somehow connecting to my NAS.
Sorry to not test it properly before starting whining
This old router has feelings and sometimes he needs to rest unplugged from the outlet
WOW! What do you have on your drive! LOL. For comparison's sake, I've got 31 backups going, and totaling about 573MB.With the purge at the default (90) I was wondering about the actual space being used on my NAS. I needn't have been concerned - 11 backups and still less than 1GB, tonight will break that.
Just putting it out there (and giving a wee bump to the thread in the process).
Look at my signature, and consider that I set everything possible to store data on the usb rather than jffs. So that includes data for Diversion, spdMerlin and others.WOW! What do you have on your drive! LOL. For comparison's sake, I've got 31 backups going, and totaling about 573MB.
Makes complete sense now!Look at my signature, and consider that I set everything possible to store data on the usb rather than jffs. So that includes data for Diversion, spdMerlin and others.
Why would it matter whether you store to jffs or USB as far as backup size? Both are backed up by the backupmon script. Unless I'm missing something...Look at my signature, and consider that I set everything possible to store data on the usb rather than jffs. So that includes data for Diversion, spdMerlin and others.
I wouldn't doubt that an out-of-control jffs would have some effect on router stability for sure! I'm only using 3MB. Keeping it lean!I only have a 63MB jffs partition. Since starting the backups the chart data and all that has blown ssd usage up from 45 to 131MB. If that data was stored to jffs without any cropping I'd have hit some kind of out-of-memory condition days ago.
mmmmm, some kind of realisation just hit me. @Viktor Jaep those users who are experiencing slowdowns and random reboots, could they possibly be filling the jffs partition with this data? Or is that just too simple?
@Viktor Jaep A lean, mean fighting machine!I wouldn't doubt that an out-of-control jffs would have some effect on router stability for sure! I'm only using 3MB. Keeping it lean!
LOL! After experimenting with so many scripts over the years, I'm determined to just use the K.I.S.S. method to radically reduce the amount of frustration and hairpulling incidents.@Viktor Jaep A lean, mean fighting machine!
That's actually an interesting factoid... who or what determines the jffs partition size? You're on a AX88U with a 63MB partition. I'm on a new GT-AX6000, with only a 44MB partition size. Do these models truly come with such varying memory sizes that they cannot even agree on a standard jffs partition size?I only have a 63MB jffs partition.
Oh boy... thanks for that! Now I'm going to be freaking out about what's frequently writing to my jffs...I don't try to understand Asus' reasoning but an interesting read about jffs here
It's really interesting that frequent writes should be avoided or face an untimely death. Another penny's just dropped. I assume failing flash would definitely, eventually kill a router that uses jffs for data storage rather than usb.
And I read that the newer devices (e.g., GT-AX6000) do not use JFFS, but rather UBIFS (another memory technology), which may also be part of differing partition size.I don't try to understand Asus' reasoning but an interesting read about jffs here
It's really interesting that frequent writes should be avoided or face an untimely death. Another penny's just dropped.
Thanks! I will definitely sleep better at night now knowing UBIFS has got my back!And I read that the newer devices (e.g., GT-AX6000) do not use JFFS, but rather UBIFS (another memory technology), which may also be part of differing partition size.
UBIFS File System
UBIFS on ASUS Routers
That would work, so long as it's formatted to ext4 using amtm and has the same label.Hi Jaep,
Sorry I’m late to the party. So many replies in short time of release!!! If I have BACKUPMON, and my ever heating usb sticks fail, I can make the jump to ssd/hdd. But is there a way to do this deliberately and not wait for it to fail?
*sips coffee
Perfect! Thanks RipshodThat would work, so long as it's formatted to ext4 using amtm and has the same label.
Welcome To SNBForums
SNBForums is a community for anyone who wants to learn about or discuss the latest in wireless routers, network storage and the ins and outs of building and maintaining a small network.
If you'd like to post a question, simply register and have at it!
While you're at it, please check out SmallNetBuilder for product reviews and our famous Router Charts, Ranker and plenty more!