4.1 KiB
created | layout | layout_old | redirect_to | tags | title | toc | updated | |||
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2009-04-03 12:30:33 +0200 | redirect | default | https://blog.mbirth.de/archives/2009/04/03/dd-wrt.html |
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DD-WRT | false | 2009-12-04 00:54:05 +0100 |
DD-WRT is an alternative firmware for several WLAN routers which offers a lot of more features than the default firmwares of most routers, such as repeater mode, printserver, fileserver, etc.. I use it on an ASUS WL-300g and a Linksys WRT54GL.
- Homepage: dd-wrt.com
Configure as non-WDS repeater
After a lot of trial-and-error and studying the different HowTos, I now found the best settings to make my former AccessPoint a repeater.
So here are the neccessary settings. Pages you don't need to change do not have an image linked.
- Setup
- [Basic Setup]({{ site.url }}/assets/setup_basic_setup.png)
- DDNS
- MAC Address Clone
- [Advanced Routing]({{ site.url }}/assets/setup_advanced_routing.png)
- [Networking]({{ site.url }}/assets/setup_networking.png)
- Wireless
- [Basic Settings]({{ site.url }}/assets/wireless_basic_settings.png)
- Radius
- [Wireless Security]({{ site.url }}/assets/wireless_wireless_security.png)
- MAC Filter
- [Advanced Settings]({{ site.url }}/assets/wireless_advanced_settings.png)
- [WDS]({{ site.url }}/assets/wireless_wds.png)
- Services
- [Services]({{ site.url }}/assets/services_services.png)
- PPTP
- Hotspot
- Security
- [Firewall]({{ site.url }}/assets/security_firewall.png)
- VPN
- Access Restrictions
- WAN Access
- NAT / QoS
- Port Forwarding
- Port Range Forwarding
- Port Triggering
- UPnP
- DMZ
- QoS
- Administration
- Management
- Keep Alive
- Commands
- WOL
- Factory Defaults
- Firmware Upgrade
- Backup
- Status
- Router
- LAN
- Wireless
- Bandwidth
- Sys-Info
Notify about new IP via Prowl service
Prowl was originally thought as a remote notification service from MacOS Growl to the iPhone. But it provides a great web-based API so that it can be used for any other purpose.
The DD-WRT Wiki lists all the locations where you can place
scripts for automatic execution. As we want to be notified upon IP changes, the best event is the wanup
. So create a
file /tmp/etc/config/prowl.wanup
. In the Script Examples
section, there's a nice DynDNS script which shows, how to get the current WAN IP and check whether it has changed.
With some modifications, it looks like this:
{% highlight bash %} #!/bin/sh IFACE=ppp0 OLDFILE=/tmp/ipaddr.cache
OLD_IP=cat $OLDFILE
NEW_IP=ifconfig ${IFACE} | sed '/.*inet addr:/!d;s///;s/ .*//'
Special (private) Unicode icons for the iPhone
PROWL_UP="" PROWL_DISH=""
if [ "$NEW_IP" != "$OLD_IP" ]; then /tmp/root/prowl.sh "ppp0 is $PROWL_UP" -2 "IP is $NEW_IP $PROWL_DISH" echo $NEW_IP > $OLDFILE echo Updated IP to $NEW_IP fi {% endhighlight %}
Put this file to /tmp/etc/config/prowl.wanup
. The used /tmp/root/prowl.sh
is the one you can find in the TODO:software:sh:http-post article.
*[WLAN]: Wireless Local Area Network *[SSID]: Service Set Identifier *[DDNS]: Dynamic DNS *[MAC]: Media Access Control *[WDS]: Wireless Distribution System *[PPTP]: Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol *[VPN]: Virtual Private Network *[NAT]: Network Address Translation *[QoS]: Quality of Service *[UPnP]: Universal Plug'n'Play *[DMZ]: Demilitarized Zone *[WOL]: Wake-on-LAN *[LAN]: Local Area Network *[API]: Application Programming Interface *[WAN]: Wide Area Network