I have Asuswrt-Merlin (3.0.0.4.260.21) running on my Asus RT-AC66U.
Generally it works very well, but I have one particular problem...
Although the NTP server is set in the GUI (pool.ntp.org), the router never seems to actually get the time from the server when it is booted.
Hence, after booting it is always resetting to the default date/time.
This is a problem for me as I want to use the OpenVPN client, which needs correct date/time set for the TLS authentication with the VPN server.
If I enter "vpnclient -h pool.ntp.org -s" in "Run Cmd" in the GUI, it does find the server and updates the time properly.
Similarly, if I telnet to the router and either type the same, or just "ntp", again it finds the right time. (Just typing "ntp" at "Run Cmd" seems to crash the GUI web server, for whatever reason...).
However, I tried adding the above line to wan-start JFFS script (with correct permissions etc), but it still doesn't seem to work when the router is rebooted.
Any ideas much appreciated...
Generally it works very well, but I have one particular problem...
Although the NTP server is set in the GUI (pool.ntp.org), the router never seems to actually get the time from the server when it is booted.
Hence, after booting it is always resetting to the default date/time.
This is a problem for me as I want to use the OpenVPN client, which needs correct date/time set for the TLS authentication with the VPN server.
If I enter "vpnclient -h pool.ntp.org -s" in "Run Cmd" in the GUI, it does find the server and updates the time properly.
Similarly, if I telnet to the router and either type the same, or just "ntp", again it finds the right time. (Just typing "ntp" at "Run Cmd" seems to crash the GUI web server, for whatever reason...).
However, I tried adding the above line to wan-start JFFS script (with correct permissions etc), but it still doesn't seem to work when the router is rebooted.
Any ideas much appreciated...