Installed it on a TP-Link to replace my ISP router a couple days ago. I'm super impressed with how it needed almost no config (except to manually activate the Wifi and to set a password).
I'd recommend downloading the Material theme for anyone complaining about the barebones look.
there is often a "recovery feature", an alternate boot partition [ i posted about this some time ago.]
if you configure your router so that it "bricks" you can boot in the last working configuration before your changes; rescue; and save to overwrite the brick partition. presumably you can do this forever, as long as you dont brick both partitions.
3 interrupted boot cycles would cause a switch to last successful boot partition.
in my case i had problems because of the curious way we have power failures here.
the power would brown out and each phase of generation would send a peak and trough, equivalent to turning power on then off before boot completion 3 times.
if you want to be snazzy, you can play on this and work two partitions at once each configured for different purpose, and accessed by briskly cycling power thrice.
rolph|5 months ago
there is often a "recovery feature", an alternate boot partition [ i posted about this some time ago.]
if you configure your router so that it "bricks" you can boot in the last working configuration before your changes; rescue; and save to overwrite the brick partition. presumably you can do this forever, as long as you dont brick both partitions.
3 interrupted boot cycles would cause a switch to last successful boot partition.
in my case i had problems because of the curious way we have power failures here. the power would brown out and each phase of generation would send a peak and trough, equivalent to turning power on then off before boot completion 3 times.
if you want to be snazzy, you can play on this and work two partitions at once each configured for different purpose, and accessed by briskly cycling power thrice.