HELLO_wORLD
Very Senior Member
Also, there is a potential fix to this problem. No a solution as it does not solve the NAND issue, but a workable fix as another alternative to using openwrt.
When I started to experience this problem, I quickly realized that the nvram save and restore commands would be useful and using them would be faster than manually entering everything at each reboot. The problem was still the need to reboot for certain parameters to be activated, and of course rebooting would delete the parameter...
@kamoj came with an experimental init.d script that would restore early in the boot process the nvram from a previously saved state, and it worked on my defective R7800. Of course, I could not experiment a lot, so we did not go very far with that, but I the little experience I had with it seems to show that it is a real potential fix.
I made a little backup script to save the nvram in a way that is compatible with @kamoj ’s experimental restore script in case I would need it in the future (hopefully not), and it also makes a time stamped backup on the external drive.
When I started to experience this problem, I quickly realized that the nvram save and restore commands would be useful and using them would be faster than manually entering everything at each reboot. The problem was still the need to reboot for certain parameters to be activated, and of course rebooting would delete the parameter...
@kamoj came with an experimental init.d script that would restore early in the boot process the nvram from a previously saved state, and it worked on my defective R7800. Of course, I could not experiment a lot, so we did not go very far with that, but I the little experience I had with it seems to show that it is a real potential fix.
I made a little backup script to save the nvram in a way that is compatible with @kamoj ’s experimental restore script in case I would need it in the future (hopefully not), and it also makes a time stamped backup on the external drive.