<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
</head>
<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#000000">
I was all proud and snobby that I flashed CeroWRT onto a new (to me)
NG WNDR 3800. <br>
Well ... maybe not snobby, but was none-the-less very geeked about
it. <br>
<br>
The thing has worked well for several months, barring weirdness
which I attribute to my previously existing "stuff". <br>
Then DHCP quit. Looks like DHCPv6 is still serving out leases. <br>
Why? <br>
<br>
This thing is all BusyBoxy as one would expect. <br>
It's a MIPS based machine, and yeah *WRT is Linux, but memory is at
a premium. <br>
So the DHCP server is '<font face="Courier New, Courier, monospace">odhcpd</font>'.
I see no errors and '<font face="Courier New, Courier, monospace">opkg</font>'
does not report it being out of date. (But see below.) <br>
<br>
Search engines have not turned up any info that might clue me in, so
I thought I should poll the group and ask: does this sound familiar?
<br>
<br>
A related question: <br>
How do I reconfigure '<font face="Courier New, Courier, monospace">opkg</font>'
to point at a working OpenWRT trunk rather than at the defunct
CeroWRT base? <br>
<br>
CeroWRT forked from OpenWRT so that Jim Gettys and Dave Taht and
others could fix buffer bloat. That work has been accepted into
OpenWRT, so it makes sense for a box like mine to (now) point at the
main repository. But how? <br>
<br>
Thanks. <br>
<br>
-- R; <><<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
</body>
</html>