OpenWrt One - celebrating 20 years of OpenWrt

Janusz Dziedzic janusz.dziedzic at gmail.com
Wed Jan 17 08:46:14 PST 2024


śr., 17 sty 2024 o 16:27 John Crispin <john at phrozen.org> napisał(a):
>
> Additional FAQ for OpenWrt One
>
> This is a summary of some further questions regarding the OpenWrt One
> project gathered so far. After OpenWrt voted to move forward, it will be
> converted into a page within the OpenWrt wiki as a place for collecting
> the latest information.
>
> Q: Will the various hardware buttons and switches be fully exposed on
> the outside?
> A: The latest iteration of the design will fully expose all buttons and
> switches.
>
> Q: Will there be an option to purchase preassembled kits?
> A: We're considering that option but still need to explore possibilities
> with the manufacturer.
>
> Q: When do you expect general availability?
> A: Once we vote to move forward, it will take around 45 days until the
> first PCBA engineering samples get shipped. These will be passed on to
> developers for testing. Once they are verified it will probably take
> another 30-45 days until they can be ordered. So we are looking at April
> timeframe.
>
> Q: What kind of power supply is needed?
> A: While the initial announcement imprecisely referred to the power
> supply as "USB-PD 12V" the PCB will draw its required power from a USB-C
> PD 3.0/2.0 source.
>
> Q: Why does the current design not feature any USB 3.0 connectivity?
> A: USB 3.0 always has the risk of interference with 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi. We
> would like to reduce risk as much as possible. Interference proofing the
> board would add considerable complexity and costs.
>
> Q: Why did you implement a M.2 slot?
> A: After careful consideration we came to the conclusion that directly
> exposing a PCIe 1x lane in the form of an M.2 slot provides the most
> flexibility for potential expansions. It can be used for NVMe storage
> (up to 2242 when using an enclosure), e.g. to host containers or media
> files. It also enables the simple use of other, non-OpenWrt
> distributions with larger storage footprints.
>
Do you think I can use m.2 A->M converter here and use wifi mt7916 A+E
(6GHz) instead of NVMe?
Eg. https://kamami.pl/akcesoria-do-raspberry-pi/587051-m2-m-key-to-m2-a-key-adapter-m2-m-key-do-m2-a-key.html
Will that work?


> Q: Why is there no consideration for Wi-Fi 6E/7 (6GHz / Tri-Band)?
> A: Neither is the mac80211 upstream support for Wi-Fi 7 complete, nor is
> there a fully integrated tri-band SoC solution available right now, let
> alone fully or partially supported upstream. Supporting Wi-Fi 7 would
> drastically increase the overall costs and make it impossible to deliver
> sufficient software support in the foreseeable future.
>
> Q: Why are there only two ethernet ports?
> A: We didn't want to impose additional complexity and costs by including
> an external managed switch IC. One port is 1GBit/s capable, while the
> other features a speed up to 2.5GBit/s. This is a limitation of the
> chosen SoC.
>
> Q: Why should I get the One? There are more capable, more featured
> devices available!
> A: The OpenWrt One is intended to serve as a robust and simple
> educational platform for OpenWrt enthusiasts, it is neither intended to
> be a competitor to off the shelf SOHO routers nor do we aim for the
> largest possible amount of features. It also serves as a donation
> vehicle for the OpenWrt project.
>
> Q: Does that mean that OpenWrt will stop supporting other hardware?
> A: There is no intention at all to change the way OpenWrt operates or
> how it implements and supports current and future hardware. The OpenWrt
> One device will be supported as one device among many others and receive
> the same level of support.
>
> Q: Doesn't this draw attention away from properly supporting existing
> devices?
> A: The OpenWrt One project is a privately led initiative by a few
> enthusiasts, there is no intent to change the focus of the OpenWrt
> project in any way.
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> openwrt-devel mailing list
> openwrt-devel at lists.openwrt.org
> https://lists.openwrt.org/mailman/listinfo/openwrt-devel



-- 
Janusz Dziedzic



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