Pancho <
[email protected]> wrote:
On 09/06/2024 22:59, Theo wrote:
David <[email protected]> wrote:
That is another use.
Again, does anyone use it now?
I assume the standard board for a router has a USB port now, due to
tradition.
I use it for adding a USB stick for extra storage to routers that are running open source distros -
And to install the distros in the first place. Unless they now come with
a network boot/install bios?
You typically go to their firmware update webpage and 'upgrade' to a
firmware file you download from the open source project. Some of them have annoying lockouts and you have to poke them via a serial cable, which you
might have to solder to some hidden pads inside somewhere. I've never
seen one where you install from USB, although they could exist.
For me, the Raspberry Pi killed off any reason to use a router for
anything apart from routing stuff.
They are good for networking stuff (lots of ports), which Pis aren't. Everything else is generally worse.
I used to have a fleet of routers running Debian because that was the
cheapest way to get a small embedded box, but they were a PITA. Had to
solder serial console cables, never enough flash or RAM, weedy 32-bit MIPS
CPU needing a custom kernel, most of the router distros weren't 'proper' so
you couldn't install packages, etc. I was very happy when all that could
move to RPi.
Theo
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