Hello all,
Maybe this helps others who have this problem and also may be of use for the firmware developer.
When upgrading my RT-AC66U B1 to merlin 386.3_2, after reboot the Web user interface did not work. In some instances you could login, but after a while the pages would not load (timeout), other times not even the login worked. The router itself did its job of connecting my network to the internet though.
A hardware reset (with the WPS button) solved the problem, but of course I lost all the router settings. I reapplied a previous setting file from the same router but older firmware (384 I believe, although those settings were restored again and again since a lot older versions). The problem showed up again obviously, however I could connect to the router via ssh. I found out that the nt_center process used a lot of cpu. Found this thread about nt_center.db, deleted the file and everything started to work. Before deleting it, my nt_center.db was about 4 MB large. After reboot, a new one of 16 KB was created by the service.
So maybe this helps someone in a similar situation -- I know that after a fw update we should factory reset the router, but maybe there are others like me, who want to avoid reentering all the settings and then hope it works .
Incidentally, the many restorations of the same settings on various fw versions, also made the problem described in this other thread occur. On my router the name of the root account is changed, and it seems at some step the order of the SMB accounts in the SMB configuration was altered and it strangely interfered with the System settings tab in Administration. The solution described in post #9 there worked flawlessly, so maybe it could also help others.
Hope this helps.
Maybe this helps others who have this problem and also may be of use for the firmware developer.
When upgrading my RT-AC66U B1 to merlin 386.3_2, after reboot the Web user interface did not work. In some instances you could login, but after a while the pages would not load (timeout), other times not even the login worked. The router itself did its job of connecting my network to the internet though.
A hardware reset (with the WPS button) solved the problem, but of course I lost all the router settings. I reapplied a previous setting file from the same router but older firmware (384 I believe, although those settings were restored again and again since a lot older versions). The problem showed up again obviously, however I could connect to the router via ssh. I found out that the nt_center process used a lot of cpu. Found this thread about nt_center.db, deleted the file and everything started to work. Before deleting it, my nt_center.db was about 4 MB large. After reboot, a new one of 16 KB was created by the service.
So maybe this helps someone in a similar situation -- I know that after a fw update we should factory reset the router, but maybe there are others like me, who want to avoid reentering all the settings and then hope it works .
Incidentally, the many restorations of the same settings on various fw versions, also made the problem described in this other thread occur. On my router the name of the root account is changed, and it seems at some step the order of the SMB accounts in the SMB configuration was altered and it strangely interfered with the System settings tab in Administration. The solution described in post #9 there worked flawlessly, so maybe it could also help others.
Hope this helps.
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