Yes, at about 97%.That means at some point it will stop increasing?
How do you get access to the Shell?Thanks. I was seeing similar on my new GS-AX3000 and was worried. I have USB drive and about 30 devices connected.
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I then ran the "free" command in the shell and saw this includes cache and buffers. I presume that at least the cache can be freed and re-deployed if needed. But I am no expert.
On my new GS-AX3000 with stock firmware it couldn't be easier. You can use telnet or ssh. They can easily be enabled under Administration->System in the stock UI of my model. This was a major factor in my choosing to buy Asus this time. Just be sure to not make this available over the WAN unless you really know what you are doing.How do you get access to the Shell?
I have USB drive and about 30 devices connected.
I have completely forgotten about SSH, I had the RT-5300 3 years ago, before I moved to a different brand, I am glad I am back with Asus.On my new GS-AX3000 with stock firmware it couldn't be easier. You can use telnet or ssh. They can easily be enabled under Administration->System in the stock UI of my model. This was a major factor in my choosing to buy Asus this time. Just be sure to not make this available over the WAN unless you really know what you are doing.
Thanks. Good to hear this. I really use the USB thumb drive infrequently. However, I am REALLY glad to have the USB ability as it has allowed me to install Entware on the stock firmware - which otherwise would happen only on Merlin, I guess. I really needed a tcpdump binary. It wasn't pre-installed as on my old Netgear. But once I got Entware installed, getting the tcpdump package on there was a piece of cake. Cheers!In your case RAM is used for disk read/write buffers. When Samba is not in use, the same RAM will be used for something else, if requested. Just don’t push the router too much with large file transfers. It’s a router, not a NAS.
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