Simon W
Regular Contributor
Hi,
I've had the "low NVRAM" warning on my RT-AC3200 for a while now, always assumed this to be likely a product of having been lazy for a few code upgrades and not factory defaulting etc. So today I tried to tackle it, but with no success:
First I backed up using the NVRAM Save/Restore tool, then factory defaulted, checked the NVRAM usage levels out-of-the-box (all ok), then using the NVRAM Save/Restore tool to do a clean restore = this pretty much put me back the the high NVRAM levels I started with.
Second I factory defaulted again then reconfigured from scratch manually, seemed to be ok until I imported the final two blobs of config, my static IP assignments (around 15 of them) and then, what seemed to push it over the edge, my custom_clientlist (I've given most of my devices meaningful names, around 50 of them) = high NVRAM levels again.
Surely this can't be right that I've hit a limitation of the router?! I wouldn't say I use all the features, certainly none of the VPN settings, nor any of the media sharing, cloud integration etc. If the custom_clientlist takes such a dint out of the very limited NVRAM isn't it possible to offload this to somewhere else?
To quantify I'm currently running at 63565 / 65536 bytes.
What sort of NVRAM utilisation do others run at (fully configured / steady state)? Can't see how mine should be wildly different?!
Thanks.
I've had the "low NVRAM" warning on my RT-AC3200 for a while now, always assumed this to be likely a product of having been lazy for a few code upgrades and not factory defaulting etc. So today I tried to tackle it, but with no success:
First I backed up using the NVRAM Save/Restore tool, then factory defaulted, checked the NVRAM usage levels out-of-the-box (all ok), then using the NVRAM Save/Restore tool to do a clean restore = this pretty much put me back the the high NVRAM levels I started with.
Second I factory defaulted again then reconfigured from scratch manually, seemed to be ok until I imported the final two blobs of config, my static IP assignments (around 15 of them) and then, what seemed to push it over the edge, my custom_clientlist (I've given most of my devices meaningful names, around 50 of them) = high NVRAM levels again.
Surely this can't be right that I've hit a limitation of the router?! I wouldn't say I use all the features, certainly none of the VPN settings, nor any of the media sharing, cloud integration etc. If the custom_clientlist takes such a dint out of the very limited NVRAM isn't it possible to offload this to somewhere else?
To quantify I'm currently running at 63565 / 65536 bytes.
What sort of NVRAM utilisation do others run at (fully configured / steady state)? Can't see how mine should be wildly different?!
Thanks.
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