Yeah, unless maybe one was more a fan of hynix, haha!Enuff said, right?
Yeah, unless maybe one was more a fan of hynix, haha!Enuff said, right?
There really is magic in there. After doing a manual backup of my Diversion whitelist to facilitate the swap from a USB thumb drive to the new SSD, I discovered that Diversion will back itself up to jfss and then use that backup to reinstall Diversion on a new drive. I didn't have to a thing because @thelonelycoder had already done the work for me.*Magic* - the essential ingredient in any of @thelonelycoder's scripts.
There really is magic in there. After doing a manual backup of my Diversion whitelist to facilitate the swap from a USB thumb drive to the new SSD, I discovered that Diversion will back itself up to jfss and then use that backup to reinstall Diversion on a new drive. I didn't have to a thing because @thelonelycoder had already done the work for me.
Stop bitching about what we do out of new and past experiences. Users clearly want choice and we offer it to them. The wide successful usage tells a clear picture. These days consumer routers do more than just routing. Live with that fact.
Well - at some point - folks are going to have to consider what all these scripts do for security of the device.
As I've previously mentioned - I appreciate the creativity and contributions of the larger scripting community, but at the same time, I do question if that development effort has taken security as a priority... I think not... most of the scripters here are hobby players, and have zero skin in the game if your device is compromised...
at least @RMerlin, @GNUton, and John's fork, they do consider security first...
I do development as my jobby-job, and I've done this for a better part of 30 years - so don't take my feedback lightly...
I'm not some guy writing shell scripts in grandma's cellar and publishing it on github...
What he said. I’m a wee bit disappointed my thread has taken this turn.First pages of this thread fit well in my RAM. On this last one I may need 10GB swap.
Guys, what happened? We had some fun here mixed with usable for many information.
I’ve been wanting to get a Patriot 300 NVMe SSD and an Enclosure and have been reading quite a lot about certain of the the Orico controllers falling asleep (at the wheel, so to speak), but primarily with JMicron (JM583?) controllers (not just Orico). The RTL9210 chipset and AS Media ASMXXX seem less affected. Maybe that’s the power issue?Just to bring this back to the OP, I did put one of the Patriot Burst SSDs in an Orico enclosure and plugged it in to my 88U. It cycles in and out, mounting and unmounting. I'm guessing this is a power issue? Happens in either port, and not in the USB ports in my PCs. The pair work just fine in those.
Did you format the drive before connecting it to the router? If so what format did you use? If not what is the drive's format? Does the system log file show any errors with the drive or it's mounting? Did you follow the often recommended L&LD's AMTM steps for preparing the drive for use with swap file and scripts? See the Prepare the USB Drive for the swap file, Entware, and scripts. section at the following link:Just to bring this back to the OP, I did put one of the Patriot Burst SSDs in an Orico enclosure and plugged it in to my 88U. It cycles in and out, mounting and unmounting. I'm guessing this is a power issue? Happens in either port, and not in the USB ports in my PCs. The pair work just fine in those.
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