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Wireless Router Issues
At Philadelphia we had our scouting system up and running for everyone to use. We constantly ran into issues with our router crashing however. We used a Linksys WRT54G with dd-wrt firmware. Stock settings are to hand out 50 dhcp addresses, which we hit midday Thursday I think. I upped it to 250 maximum users, but we started running into issues with the Wi-Fi just dropping out of existence (no one's device could find it). We had a few things hardwired into the router, and they continued to function normally. We had about 70-80 DHCP entries around this time.
Is the issue with the router handling too many DHCP users? Would running the DHCP server on a computer behind the router, thus making the router function only as a access point/switch? Or can a WRT54G absolutely not handle this traffic load? Is there any wi-fi system that is more powerful? |
Re: Wireless Router Issues
hmm.. dd-wrt, means you are using a v5 router which has only 8mb ram and 2mb flash?
You'd be better off with an older one which has more flash .. But if you are thinking of serving a whole arena of users (probably > 250) I think you will be better off with a linux box giving out serving DHCP on class A or B subnets, with the router merely bridging your wireless and wired interfaces (i.e. disable internal dhcp). The number of requests / flows may also be maxing out its ram. |
Re: Wireless Router Issues
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You might see a somewhat greater number of simultaneous users if you run in G only mode. If you want to increase the number of connected clients, you could run 3 access points on the non-overlapping channels 1, 6, and 11, and route them on the WAN side of the 3 WRT54G's. |
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I have a v2 WRT54G, so it is with 16mb of RAM. I just upgraded to dd-wrt v24 RC 6.2, and I'm going to try and disable as many functions as possible. It's impossible to test until we get to an event though :( |
Re: Wireless Router Issues
While I was reading the Championship Essential Information I noticed that it asks people not to set up wireless networks at the Championship.
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Re: Wireless Router Issues
I <3 the DD-WRT firmware. It does wonderful things traditional router firmware cannot. I've used it on a WRT54G v7 and it would use up about 94% of the memory just idling. So, perhaps you are hitting the upper limits of your memory?
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Re: Wireless Router Issues
Tomato firmware rocks too :) :cool:
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You can try wiring a second router behind the first router to ease the load instead of having a computer.
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I'm going to try using a gigabit switch with two wireless access points connected, and either a computer or a wired router giving out DHCP addresses. This way, all wireless connections are split between the access points, and all traffic goes through the switch - which should be more than capable of the load. |
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Although I believe this 'rule' covers the entire event (Stands + Pits), I don't see where you would get power to run one in the stands anyways, as I am pretty sure there is no AC easily accessible.
That being said, I don't think they would mind an ad hoc wireless network being run in the stands, which ought to work for a scouting system. |
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I'm not sure why they are showing negative love for the WiFi, but please respect their decision. |
Re: Wireless Router Issues
This could be because maybe FIRST is doing a frequency study for the new control system.
If FIRST decides to go with 2.4 Ghz for the new control system, it could spell the end for all team owned WI-FI networks at events. |
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