Please make cooler status go from 30 to 80, starting at 50 is too high
Mine goes from 40 to 90, take another look (FWIW: RT-AC87U). My wireless temps flatline but that's because I use a cooler.
Please make cooler status go from 30 to 80, starting at 50 is too high
OK, I was dead wrong on that, so I corrected the post above, the quotes ARE there around "auth token".Interesting! I use PIA and I just added that line but it had to be formatted as such to be accepted, or the VPN would not come up.
Code:pull-filter ignore "auth token"
Cheers!
@RMerlin can we please have a firmware option added to disable logging of these WLCEVENTD events, like we currently have for DHCP/RA queries? Thanks...I get those from an iPhone, Apple watch, Pixel 2 XL, LG Watch Sport, Nexus 6, Huawei watch 1, Nexus 7, Kindle paperwhite, TP Link smart lights, Google Home Mini, Google Home Max, literally every wifi device I have connected to my network. all are 5G except the three TP Link bulbs, and none of them are switching networks.
Most of these event wireless client events are wakeup (Assoc) to see if they have commands, then sleep (Disassoc). I see those when devices leave home and later return. It is the wireless daemon logging events. Yes new in syslog, but I like the info rather than it being hidden behind the manufacturer "hidden" curtain
FYI, there is a script to install syslog-ng coming in a couple weeks that will install a filter to move the wlceventd messages to their own log file.@RMerlin can we please have a firmware option added to disable logging of these WLCEVENTD events, like we currently have for DHCP/RA queries? Thanks...
Thanks for that info, but I'm still hoping this feature can be added to the base Asuswrt-Merlin firmware. I'm not currently using any extra modules and I prefer not having to do that just for this issue.FYI, there is a script to install syslog-ng coming in a couple weeks that will install a filter to move the wlceventd messages to their own log file.
@RMerlin can we please have a firmware option added to disable logging of these WLCEVENTD events, like we currently have for DHCP/RA queries? Thanks...
Yep, I don't see why the big deal?I can't "configure" it, it's done by a closed source daemon.
Just be patient, Asus are aware of the issue (it's actually a bug in their code where the daemon ignores the nvram that's supposed to control logging verbosity for that daemon).
It's a logfile, it's meant to contain info, not to be looked at constantly... You probably never looked at a CentOS 7 system log, with systemd generating log entries every couple of minutes.
That's good to know, thanks for that info!I can't "configure" it, it's done by a closed source daemon.
Just be patient, Asus are aware of the issue (it's actually a bug in their code where the daemon ignores the nvram that's supposed to control logging verbosity for that daemon).
Yes I have, thanks. I just prefer not to see anything on the System Log page unless it's worth paying attention to, and I would rather not fiddle with the default message log level to get it that way. Sort of like setting up a monitoring system to only notify you if something truly needs to be looked at, i.e. "No news is good news."It's a logfile, it's meant to contain info, not to be looked at constantly... You probably never looked at a CentOS 7 system log, with systemd generating log entries every couple of minutes.
50 to 80 AX88UMine goes from 40 to 90, take another look (FWIW: RT-AC87U). My wireless temps flatline but that's because I use a cooler.
OK, another strange thing I found. I see an asus device in my network with IP address 169.254.39.221 which I never saw before and I have no freaking idea what that is. My network is 192.168.1.0/24. On my router I can see a br0 device with IP 169.254.39.217. What the hell is this for? The mac address of this new asus devices does not equal the mac of my router, very strange.
OK, another strange thing I found. I see an asus device in my network with IP address 169.254.39.221 which I never saw before and I have no freaking idea what that is. My network is 192.168.1.0/24. On my router I can see a br0 device with IP 169.254.39.217. What the hell is this for? The mac address of this new asus devices does not equal the mac of my router, very strange.
@RMerlin so I tried everything to connect my Squeezbox Boom to RT-AC88U. I've reset the router by holding the reset button for 5 seconds to reset the router to factory settings. I then created a new SSID with the new name and tried to reconnect the Squeezbox Boom. Still same error "wireless encryption failure".
Then I tried to connect it to my old RT-AC66U (version 1). It connected in 2 second without any problems. It is running your last firmware.
Did something changed in the latest version which could have created this kind of problem? I have 2 other Squeezbox Radios. They connect without any problems, so is any other device in home.
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