drinkingbird
Part of the Furniture
When I tried 386.2 my FIOS would lose its WAN IP frequently with the log "your ISPs DHCP does not function properly". I tried all the workarounds like aggressive mode etc but could not get it to resolve. So I've been on 384.19 ever since. It works great but I do have the occasional GUI lockup or 100% CPU, plus would like some of the improved features in the new code base.
I have an RT-AC1900 (same as RT-AC68U). Wondering if anyone else with Verizon FIOS (or another provider with very short lease times) that had the issue before is running ok on the newest version? Don't want to go through a hard reset and reconfigure if it isn't resolved.
Thanks
***EDIT - THERE IS A WORKAROUND - SEE MY POSTS LATER IN THIS THREAD (and kudos to @CoyoteDen for finding the problem). Long story short, if you are using FIOS (Verizon at least, possibly Frontier, ATT, others) and using Guest Network 1, disable GN1, reboot, and configure your GN on Guest Network 2 or 3 instead. GN1 has a bug where it is sending LAN DHCP queries to the WAN causing conflict and your WAN IP to get blocked.
Note if you haven't already, you should upgrade to 386.5 and then do a factory reset with "initialize" checked off (take screen shots or copy/paste any settings or scripts you need to keep). After that is done, configure just enough to get into the router, then select "format jffs", click apply, reboot, wait 5 mins, and reboot again. Then manually re-enter all your configs, do not restore a backup. This is to ensure you have a fully clean install with no gremlins left over from earlier versions. Even earlier versions of 386 had issues with Guest Network 2 and 3 NOT being isolated from the main network, so you want to make sure you're on the latest version with clean configs. There is a more involved "nuclear reset" procedure but I think the above is sufficient to get you all cleaned up.
Once done, test your guest network to ensure it is isolated from the LAN. On my RT-AC1900 (same as 68U) it is fine using the above procedure, but every router/firmware treats things a bit differently.
Note if you are using AIMESH and extending your guest network to other nodes, then the solution is a bit more complex. You need to stay on GN1 but set up a script to remove the WAN port from the special AIMESH VLANs. I've linked a post later in this thread with details on that.
I have an RT-AC1900 (same as RT-AC68U). Wondering if anyone else with Verizon FIOS (or another provider with very short lease times) that had the issue before is running ok on the newest version? Don't want to go through a hard reset and reconfigure if it isn't resolved.
Thanks
***EDIT - THERE IS A WORKAROUND - SEE MY POSTS LATER IN THIS THREAD (and kudos to @CoyoteDen for finding the problem). Long story short, if you are using FIOS (Verizon at least, possibly Frontier, ATT, others) and using Guest Network 1, disable GN1, reboot, and configure your GN on Guest Network 2 or 3 instead. GN1 has a bug where it is sending LAN DHCP queries to the WAN causing conflict and your WAN IP to get blocked.
Note if you haven't already, you should upgrade to 386.5 and then do a factory reset with "initialize" checked off (take screen shots or copy/paste any settings or scripts you need to keep). After that is done, configure just enough to get into the router, then select "format jffs", click apply, reboot, wait 5 mins, and reboot again. Then manually re-enter all your configs, do not restore a backup. This is to ensure you have a fully clean install with no gremlins left over from earlier versions. Even earlier versions of 386 had issues with Guest Network 2 and 3 NOT being isolated from the main network, so you want to make sure you're on the latest version with clean configs. There is a more involved "nuclear reset" procedure but I think the above is sufficient to get you all cleaned up.
Once done, test your guest network to ensure it is isolated from the LAN. On my RT-AC1900 (same as 68U) it is fine using the above procedure, but every router/firmware treats things a bit differently.
Note if you are using AIMESH and extending your guest network to other nodes, then the solution is a bit more complex. You need to stay on GN1 but set up a script to remove the WAN port from the special AIMESH VLANs. I've linked a post later in this thread with details on that.
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