LetMePutDa
Occasional Visitor
Yes, mine is working perfectly.Who uses the USB 3.0 connector? Does the flash drive work with firmware 384.16?
ASUS RT-AC68U does not work.
Yes, mine is working perfectly.Who uses the USB 3.0 connector? Does the flash drive work with firmware 384.16?
ASUS RT-AC68U does not work.
My RT-AC5300 is working with a usb3 hub and usb3 hdd.Who uses the USB 3.0 connector? Does the flash drive work with firmware 384.16?
ASUS RT-AC68U does not work.
My AC86U has a 1 TB SSD in the USB 3.0 slot set to USB3, used for some file storage (2Mb) and Apple TimeMachine, and a USB 3.0 in the USB2 slot with AMTM. Skynet, Diversion, and the utis in my sig. Never had a USB not working issue in 3 years with N66u, AC68U or AC86U. AX88U on the way.Who uses the USB 3.0 connector? Does the flash drive work with firmware 384.16?
ASUS RT-AC68U does not work.
I use USB 3.0 connector and USB Mode is USB 3.0.Who uses the USB 3.0 connector? Does the flash drive work with firmware 384.16?
ASUS RT-AC68U does not work.
Just updated to 384.16 AX58U. Working good !!!
I was never good at doing what someone told me to do.For some reason, all the script writers for RMerlin's firmware recommend choosing USB 2.0. I don't know why, but that seems to be the way it is.
Just one question.
On WAN -> DNS-over-TLS, why do we have to provide IP address?
For example, I want to put "dns.nextdns.io", but I have to manually look for their IP address (which right now is 45.90.28.0, but it can and may change!)
On android, for example, we only have to provide the hostname...
Is this the correct way of implement, or can it be fixed?
The info is still in the changelog. I'm not going to bloat each individual changelogs with 10+ model specific entries, just read past entries, ...
I suggested putting it in the source, not "bloating" the changelog, that's your strawman. Considering that yours is a mod of the stock asus ("The goal of this project is to fix issues and bring some minor functionality adjustments to the original Asus firmware"), the asus version is pretty significant, that's the core and bulk of what one is running.
The source is a natural place for this, it would allow one to find the base version from any commit or tag.
The source is a natural place for this, it would allow one to find the base version from any commit or tag.
The pieces fit together like a jigsaw puzzle.It's not that simple, because it's not "a single base version". For instance, the latest release contains pieces from 382_51640, 384_45717, 384_81351, 386_36400, 385_10002, 384_81351, 384_81116, 384_8253, 384_8137 and 384_7977. And I probably missed a few of them...
If you are going to work with the source code, then I recommend using git log --oneline | grep GPL. This is how I was able to track down this list.
Great analogy, and I totally understoodUsing a hostname as a DNS server is like saying you have to call the phonebook printing company to be sent a phonebook - kinda hard to do without the phonebook in hand to lookup up the company's phone number. Therefore, DNS servers are always defined by their IP address, not by their name.
Maybe Google relies on the regular system resolver (or an hardcoded 8.8.8.8) to resolve the hostname, but that is not the proper way to do this.
And no, that IP address will never change, since that is how it is configured in every single router or desktop PC that uses it.
The pieces fit together like a jigsaw puzzle.
Great analogy, and I totally understood
The DoT hostname to IP conversion could rely on the regular DNS we define a few lines above, but in that case some queries (at least to retrieve DoT IP) would go "unsecured", am I right?
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