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[Fork] Asuswrt-Merlin 374.43 LTS releases (Archive)

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The best match for your requirements and pre-requisites is the RT-AC68U.

Anything newer than that will not be supported by this LTS fork.

Second that... have had 2 AC68U's: Main and AP, running now for several years. Dancing with the thought of an AC86U for faster VPN throughput, but it can't really beat the AC68U's for anything else. Love the 68U's with John's firmware.
 
Second that... have had 2 AC68U's: Main and AP, running now for several years. Dancing with the thought of an AC86U for faster VPN throughput, but it can't really beat the AC68U's for anything else. Love the 68U's with John's firmware.
Good to hear thanks. Think I could get 5 or 6 years out if one?
Bob.
 
Good to hear thanks. Think I could get 5 or 6 years out if one?
Bob.

The RT-AC68U a 2013 product. We've already had 6 great years from it! :)

https://www.smallnetbuilder.com/wir...1900-first-look-netgear-r7000-a-asus-rt-ac68u

That doesn't mean it doesn't have at least 5 more still in it. ;)

For me, that would depend on having new firmware regularly (for security fixes) and john9527's LTS RMerlin fork is handling that great.

It would also depend on your ISP speeds too. If less than about 200Mbps up/down (at the very highest), then the RT-AC68U should be able to handle that too.

What may negate the above 'show stoppers' is if all of a sudden I had all 'AX' clients or their future counterpart. That doesn't mean that they won't work with the RT-AC68U though (they must be compatible to be allowed to be sold), it is just that they won't be able to hit the maximums that the future 'AX' clients will be advertising at that time.

If you are flexible on not using john9527's fork and can be willing to learn RMerlin's current release, the RT-AC86U is the router I would be recommending to you. At this point, without knowing the future, the RT-AC86U would be my best bet for the long-term. Not only for the expected support over the next 5 or 6 years, but also for the greatly enhanced performance and features it offers too.
 
The RT-AC68U a 2013 product. We've already had 6 great years from it! :)

https://www.smallnetbuilder.com/wir...1900-first-look-netgear-r7000-a-asus-rt-ac68u

That doesn't mean it doesn't have at least 5 more still in it. ;)

For me, that would depend on having new firmware regularly (for security fixes) and john9527's LTS RMerlin fork is handling that great.

It would also depend on your ISP speeds too. If less than about 200Mbps up/down (at the very highest), then the RT-AC68U should be able to handle that too.

What may negate the above 'show stoppers' is if all of a sudden I had all 'AX' clients or their future counterpart. That doesn't mean that they won't work with the RT-AC68U though (they must be compatible to be allowed to be sold), it is just that they won't be able to hit the maximums that the future 'AX' clients will be advertising at that time.

If you are flexible on not using john9527's fork and can be willing to learn RMerlin's current release, the RT-AC86U is the router I would be recommending to you. At this point, without knowing the future, the RT-AC86U would be my best bet for the long-term. Not only for the expected support over the next 5 or 6 years, but also for the greatly enhanced performance and features it offers too.
Wow thank you for that, much appreciated.
On the 86U can you pull and push the DHCP reservations and the two Mac filter lists via the USB data stitck and smb share as with the n66u?
Bob.
 
Wow thank you for that, much appreciated.
On the 86U can you pull and push the DHCP reservations and the two Mac filter lists via the USB data stitck and smb share as with the n66u?
Bob.

You're welcome! Like to help where I can.

I'm stumped by your second sentence though. Can you show screenshots or try to explain it differently? Thanks.
 
I have an RT-AC68U and a 200 MB/s connection and this router has enough CPU to handle it, no problem. When direct wired or on a 5 GHz connection, I can get my whole 230 MB/s. CPU jumps when running SpeedTest to about 50% load but during normal Internet activity runs 2% - 10% CPU. If I were buying an AC class router, I would probably get a refurb Asus RT-AC1900P model on Amazon for 88 bucks (it is the same as the RT-AC68U except with a much faster 1.4 Ghz CPU). Most AC class routers cannot do more than 1300 MB/s on a single 5 Ghz band anyway or your devices cannot so going nuts on an AC class router is really a waste of money. It is probably not worth getting any more router than the Asus RT-AC1900P until the WIFI 6 (AX class) routers begin to drop in price.
 
You're welcome! Like to help where I can.

I'm stumped by your second sentence though. Can you show screenshots or try to explain it differently? Thanks.
Okay. I have a USB memory stick connected to my router. I use this to be able to read and write the DHCP reservations file and the MAC address filters for both wireless bands. This memory device is then smb shared across my network so these files can be copied and edited.

Hope that is clearer. Sorry to cause confusion.

Bob.
 
I have an RT-AC68U and a 200 MB/s connection and this router has enough CPU to handle it, no problem. When direct wired or on a 5 GHz connection, I can get my whole 230 MB/s. CPU jumps when running SpeedTest to about 50% load but during normal Internet activity runs 2% - 10% CPU. If I were buying an AC class router, I would probably get a refurb Asus RT-AC1900P model on Amazon for 88 bucks (it is the same as the RT-AC68U except with a much faster 1.4 Ghz CPU). Most AC class routers cannot do more than 1300 MB/s on a single 5 Ghz band anyway or your devices cannot so going nuts on an AC class router is really a waste of money. It is probably not worth getting any more router than the Asus RT-AC1900P until the WIFI 6 (AX class) routers begin to drop in price.
That is very interesting, I can see I need to do more reading and thinking.
Thanks very much.
Bob.
 
Okay. I have a USB memory stick connected to my router. I use this to be able to read and write the DHCP reservations file and the MAC address filters for both wireless bands. This memory device is then smb shared across my network so these files can be copied and edited.

Hope that is clearer. Sorry to cause confusion.

Bob.

Any current RMerlin router should have you covered for the above. :)
 
Installed john9527's 374.43_2 on an RT-N66U
It is up and running, and just getting familiar with it and looking through the GUI pages
maybe it just me, but can not find anywhere the option to enable remote WAN or SSH access
this useful feature was in asuswrt-merlin, and like to check from work the system status at home
any suggestion
thanks
Those features should work exactly the same way. I just confirmed they do on the same router and firmware fork.

https://www.asus.com/support/faq/1000926/
This page helped me find both settings.
 
Installed john9527's 374.43_2 on an RT-N66U
It is up and running, and just getting familiar with it and looking through the GUI pages
maybe it just me, but can not find anywhere the option to enable remote WAN or SSH access
this useful feature was in asuswrt-merlin, and like to check from work the system status at home
any suggestion
thanks
They are there under Administration / System tab. But the better practice is to setup an OpenVPN server on the router and use an openvpn client to connect to your LAN remotely. Opening http or ssh to the WAN is asking for trouble eventually.
 
Next release has been posted to pick up a few new components/fixes. My time is still limited right now, so please be patient on new releases.

LATEST RELEASE: Update-39E1/39L1
5-April-2019
Merlin fork 374.43_39E1j9527
Download http://bit.ly/1YdgUcP
============================

Key Changes:
  • Updated components CURL, NANO, DROPBEAR, DNSMASQ
  • Updated CA bundle
  • Fixes to Stubby server selection, Updated resolver csv
    These fixes should address problems selecting/properly activating some servers (symptom is wrong server shown as selected or no DNS access with some servers). If you have manually updated the resolver csv, you should pull a new copy via 'stubby-update-resolvers.sh'
    Thanks to @ColinTaylor for helping to debug.
  • Provide filesystem type as second argument to pre-mount script (Merlin backport)
  • Increase OpenVPN interface queue length (Merlin backport)

SHA256
Code:
(Default Build - All supported routers)
998305f3c5f904105b600622bd41bc219d2f880df4b85c537b445e188df403a4  RT-N16_374.43_39E1j9527.trx
23ecdf25575ee584ac4cbb333d8d1ae83f215279110c7532a9a15cd3522e6aa0  RT-AC66U_374.43_39E1j9527.trx
212ec49152f2e5bf7561934963bd5b8b8ba2ba75896e2e9a801ff9b6eba7cece  RT-N66U_374.43_39E1j9527.trx
05044d67746cfed990bc38e4792610b484f4e196ffee2ba0f3c96615934038ef  RT-AC68U_374.43_39E1j9527.trx
6f51b71508d529438e2bb11bf52a2e8bb80df0c4421cc0f323ae26ba134baf07  RT-AC56U_374.43_39E1j9527.trx

(Legacy Only Builds)
e91ee8e68db0190bcc2b3df256a3953528b85c083dde33588fd9e9591f4aac0f  RT-AC68U_3.0.0.4_374.43_2-39L1j9527.trx
b7c718736898fb654d3b8a95c61d84e7fba7c2bd5784a63068152307d2f46a1c  RT-AC56U_3.0.0.4_374.43_2-39L1j9527.trx
1378b7c733414474a448325bff6f973841277a9ac6729ef529eed8e3b651d51f  RT-N16_3.0.0.4_374.43_2-39L1j9527.trx
07bf4344a0b5acca74b3dc035f1ccafd878f8032d6b42ee4baca02a249f52116  RT-AC66U_3.0.0.4_374.43_2-39L1j9527.trx
b7a8d4a61d6ac51b4d365079d09ed6f119e663ae4654a3b3a62f67e91b804c3d  RT-N66U_3.0.0.4_374.43_2-39L1j9527.trx
 
Welcome back john9527!

Thank you for continuing to care for us, I was just thinking about how you were doing too.
 
New update applied. Time to start the uptime streak again. No tinkering...no tinkering...no tinkering.

And the voices over the other shoulder chanting 'tinker! tinker! tinker!'. :D
 
How do I block web access on 39E1 with RT-N66U, used to be in Admin/System
 
Last edited:

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