No. ARP entries are not DHCP entries. When DHCP assigns an existing address to a new device (while the old address is no longer assigned), the ARP entry will be updated as well.Could this be related to 'ARP entries building up' here: viewtopic.php?t=195759
and hence causing issues not handing out IP's anymore?
Well, that probably requires a netinstall by now... even within v6, upgrading such devices often was problematic.You can always downgrade.
Is it possible to define custom lists of bssids to annouce via 802.11k with this? If yes, how does it work?*) wifiwave2 - added "steering" parameters and menu to set up and monitor AP neighbor groups (CLI only);
you know mikrotik has a wiki, help pages and a youtube channel where exactly NETINSTALL is mentioned.
I am tired of the crappy information provided. Is anybody here able to articulate some helpful cue?
Ok, after more testing it turns out the configuration I have in this router (AX2) is too much for the device. It does not really goes above 70% CPU usage but it does jitter a lot. I Replaced it with a RB5009 and left the AX2 as a simple AP/VPLS bridge and now I am back at a stable 7ms Ping idle/21ms Ping on download/10ms ping on upload.I am seeing a lot of jitter in the connection now, my ping in games used to be less than 80ms but right now it is 3x the amount with this version. I think the only change was that I updated all mikrotik devices to 7.11 and it sure started happening after this update.
I have a "complicated" network path. Router -> AP ->VPLS/MLPS bridge -> Station -> Router -> modem. But that was there with 7.10 without jitter.
Even speed test shows the same throughtput but now the ping during upload and download spikes up and before it didn't do that. Just a heads up and something to look out for in case your setup shows this behaviour.
First inform you about what "stable" means before you base your expectations on it. That prevents disappointment.not what I expected on "stable" tree.
To be fair, regardless of what "stable" means I'd expect firmware updates _not_ to brick my devices.First inform you about what "stable" means before you base your expectations on it. That prevents disappointment.
Yes, but so do we expect for "testing" or "development" updates. However, it is for a reason that the release topic always starts with:To be fair, regardless of what "stable" means I'd expect firmware updates _not_ to brick my devices.First inform you about what "stable" means before you base your expectations on it. That prevents disappointment.
They didn't lose power. They had enough storage space. Guess what. I also have a backup, but it isn't like it isn't a PITA to recover a bricked device...Yes, but so do we expect for "testing" or "development" updates. However, it is for a reason that the release topic always starts with:
To be fair, regardless of what "stable" means I'd expect firmware updates _not_ to brick my devices.
Before an upgrade:
1) Remember to make backup/export files before an upgrade and save them on another storage device;
2) Make sure the device will not lose power during upgrade process;
3) Device has enough free storage space for all RouterOS packages to be downloaded.
I.e. you must always be prepared. Sometimes the upgrade goes wrong for some unusual reason, and when it happens it usually is not related to the particular version of the update, but to some pre-existing condition on the device.
"bricked" MikroTik devices are normally not permanent bricks, they can be recovered using the "netinstall" procedure.
I do. DHCP client can't add a simple default route:Apologies in advance for a somewhat vague question, but is anyone having any issues with DHCP on 7.11.2 ?
Mikrotik can't handle users and their sometimes exotic configs. Not saying this is the case with you...just saying that this is not caused by RouterOS v7.11.2.What a nonsense, didn't expect this bullshit from mikrotik.
It's the default config, which comes with AX³, you know. Mikrotik must handle it with no excuses.Mikrotik can't handle users and their sometimes exotic configs. Not saying this is the case with you...just saying that this is not caused by RouterOS v7.11.2.What a nonsense, didn't expect this bullshit from mikrotik.
To downgrade my RB941 to v6, I followed the advices at
https://help.mikrotik.com/docs/display/ ... g+RouterOS
- downloading routeros-smips-6.49.10.npk (latest v6 Firmware)
- uploading it via winbox to the router
- issuing /system/package/downgrade at console
It didn't come to /system/reboot, because the downgrade command announced and seemingly performed it on it's own.
The session closed, but then no more reconnection was possible. The device appears bricked now.
I am tired of the crappy information provided. Is anybody here able to articulate some helpful cue?
No, those small smips devices do NOT use RAM to store the downloaded firmware, that is stored in flash.RAM shortage (where firmware is stored during the upgrade) is common problem on those smaller smips devices, you must make sure you have at least 7.7MB free RAM available (winbox/system/resources) before upgrade, unfortunately this doesn't help you now I guess...
It's the default config, which comes with AX³, you know. Mikrotik must handle it with no excuses.
Default is 192.168.88.1>dhcp-client on ether1 failed to add 0.0.0.0/0 route to 192.168.1.1: std failure: timeout (13)
/iot lora joineui
add joineuis="{ min=0000000000000000; max=0000000000000000 }" name=discard_all
/iot lora servers
add address=ttn.mydomain.com down-port=1700 joineui=discard_all name=TTN-TEST up-port=1700
In fairness to the poor DNS server... maybe it's related to the architecture. Is there something that point at DNS, other than DNS has had memory leaks before? It seems if DNS is leaking, it be more widespread.While I have other that are not presenting the behavior, the faulty behavior (and screenshot) was taken from a RB2011 box.
For sure it might be arch related, I also considered that. Thing is that even other RB2011s i have running the same RoS version, the leaky behavior can't be seen. After decoding supout files before and after a reboot (attached to my bug report), I can clearly see the /nova/bin/resolver process is the one using much more memory than likely needed, so I'm pretty sure (to my best knowledge) that it's DNS resolver related. Might have other variables as well, but I couldn't find any. Was expecting Mikrotik Support to pay some attention to my bug report, but it's almost 1 month old and no interaction at all from Mikrotik there :(In fairness to the poor DNS server... maybe it's related to the architecture. Is there something that point at DNS, other than DNS has had memory leaks before? It seems if DNS is leaking, it be more widespread.
No idea, but I would recommend:Hi, one of my CRS328-24P-4S+ don't know about PoE on interfaces 9-24, however PoE on theese ports still works...
Same model, with same RoS version, but different device this problem haven't.
Any idea?
Did you restore a "backup" file from another device on that one?Hi,
one of my CRS328-24P-4S+ don't know about PoE on interfaces 9-24, however PoE on theese ports still works...
Same model, with same RoS version, but different device this problem haven't.
You are correct! Had to set allowed address to a /32 for all peers and now it works.Usually that's an indication of error in peer config allowed address.
Wireguard works just fine for me with multiple peers.
The Dude has not been properly updated to work with RouterOS v7. The routing table has changed design and probably it is no longer able to parse the new table correctly.Is it normal for Device -> RouterOS -> Route tab to have empty lines?
Except when you have multiple routing tables, then SNMP retrieval of routes will fail in v7.Likely you can still view the routing table in the Snmp tab, if that is an option.