Buffalo WZR-HP-G300NH
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+ | There have been a few guides out that have reports of success when de-bricking the WZR-HP-G300NH. This however, has been explained by Brainslayer in this post, please use it for referencing info you may need to de-brick your unit, should the occasion arise. | ||
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+ | http://www.dd-wrt.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=87579 | ||
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[[Category:Buffalo guides]] | [[Category:Buffalo guides]] |
Revision as of 03:51, 18 February 2011
Contents |
Specifications: Buffalo WZR-HP-G300NH
CPU | Atheros AR9132 rev 2 (0xb9) |
---|---|
CPU Speed | 400 MHz |
Flash ROM | 32 MB |
RAM | 64 MB |
Radio | 2.4 GHz |
WLAN Support | B/G/N |
WLAN Max Speed | 300 mbps |
Antenna Location | 2x fixed external |
Switch | 4x GigE + 1 WAN |
USB | 1x USB 2.0 |
DD-WRT on Buffalo WZR-HP-G300NH
Buffalo provides a re-branded version of DD-WRT specifically for this router. It can be flashed from the GUI and is available on the Buffalo website:
http://www.buffalotech.com/support/getfile/wzrhpg300nh-pro-v24sp2-14998.zip
Read Me Documentation for Buffalo delivered DD-WRT firmware: http://www.buffalotech.com/support/getfile/wzrhpg300nh-pro-v24sp2-14998.txt
As of Feb 2010, the WZR-HP-G300NH can be flashed with DD-WRT directly from the Buffalo web GUI. To do this, go to http://www.dd-wrt.com/site/support/router-database, look up Buffalo WZR-HP-G300NH, and download the firmware file you need (just one file).
- The buffalo to ddwrt webflash file is a full build. It's for flashing from the original Buffalo firmware to DD-WRT.
- The webupgrade file is to upgrade from an older version of DD-WRT. Use this to upgrade from an old version of DD-WRT.
- To revert from DD-WRT back to stock firmware, go to http://www.dd-wrt.com/phpBB2/download.php?id=13418, and download the file. Flash using upgrade on the DD-WRT web GUI. This is the 1.6 stock firmware. You can then upgrade to the latest Buffalo firmware. You must be signed into the forum first, sign in then click the link for the webgui revert file. See the forums for details. Register and log in to see and download files.
- http://www.dd-wrt.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=63820&postdays=0&postorder=asc&highlight=13977&start=90.
- http://www.dd-wrt.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=66494&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=30. Details on reverting the firmware.
DD-WRT on Buffalo WZR-HP-G300NH (Japanese version)
The official DD-WRT release cannot be pushed by web upload onto the Japanese WZR-HP-G300NH original Buffalo firmware. Buffalo Japan added a "safeguard" that checks for Japanese firmware and rejects western firmware. For people with a Japanese router, see the following two sites for details.
- http://www.dd-wrt.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=63820&postdays=0&postorder=asc&highlight=13977&start=90
- http://www.dd-wrt.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=66494&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=30
Samba Configuration
The latest build has already include simple UI to configure Samba
DD-WRT already includes a built-in Samba server, but is missing UI to configure it. These instructions provide a simple way to setup Samba. They are based on instructions from http://g300nh.blogspot.com/2010/06/samba-sharing-in-dd-wrt.html, but have been modified for users not familiar with Linux. All setup can be done from within the DD-WRT interface without requiring the use of a remote shell.
Pre Requirements
DD-WRT doesn't have any tools to format an HDD, so you must have an preformatted HDD in a format that DD-WRT can understand (FAT32, EXT3, etc.)
Go to Services/USB within DD-WRT and change the settings as indicated below:
Core USB Support: Enable USB 2.0 Support: Enable USB Storage Support: Enable ext2 / ext3 File System Support: Enable FAT File System Support: Enable Automatic Drive Mount: Enable Disk Mount Point: /mnt
After apply the changes, if you have already plugged in an HDD, you should see its information in the UI.
Anonymous Sharing Setup
These step will share a disk that is already mounted at /mnt. It will be publicly available to everyone on the network and won't require a username or password to connect.
Go to Administrators/Commands in DD-WRT and copy the script below into the textbox then choose Save Startup
# Stop samba service killall smbd killall nmbd sleep 2 # Configure samba mkdir -p /tmp/etc/samba echo " [global] netbios name = DD-WRT workgroup = WORKGROUP server string = DD-WRT syslog = 10 obey pam restrictions = yes socket options = TCP_NODELAY preferred master = no os level = 20 security = share guest account = nobody invalid users = root, mail, deamon, reboot null passwords = yes guest only = yes map to guest = Bad User private dir = /tmp/etc/samba/ lock directory = /var/lock/ pid directory = /var/run/ unix charset = UTF-8 dos charset = UTF-8 map archive = No map hidden = No map system = No [Share] path = /mnt/ read only = no create mask = 0700 directory mask = 0700 " > /tmp/etc/samba/smb.conf # Add user for samba # guest user grep -q nobody /etc/passwd || echo 'nobody:x:65534:65534:nobody:/mnt:/bin/false' >> /etc/passwd # Start samba service SMBOPTIONS="-s /tmp/etc/samba/smb.conf" /usr/sbin/smbd $SMBOPTIONS /usr/sbin/nmbd $SMBOPTIONS
Setup Sharing with Username/Password
Because smbpasswd
program build-in DD-WRT always treats /etc/samba/smbpasswd as the samba password file, and /etc is a readonly file system, we must temporary bind /tmp/etc to /etc when adding a user. Change # Add user for samba
section like below:
# Add user for samba mount -o bind /tmp/etc /etc # clear samba user if exists echo "" > /tmp/etc/samba/smbpasswd # guest user grep -q nobody /etc/passwd || echo 'nobody:x:65534:65534:nobody:/mnt:/bin/false' >> /etc/passwd # add user: username=share, password=sharepassword grep -q share /etc/passwd || echo 'share:x:65534:65534:nobody:/mnt/:/bin/false' >> /etc/passwd smbpasswd share sharepassword umount /etc
If you need add more users, you can repeat these lines with the desired usernames and passwords
# add user: username=share, password=sharepassword grep -q share /etc/passwd || echo 'share:x:65534:65534:nobody:/mnt/:/bin/false' >> /etc/passwd smbpasswd share sharepassword
In the [global] section of Samba configuration, update the config value as indicated below:
encrypt passwords = true passdb backend = smbpasswd security = user null passwords = no guest only = no smb passwd file = /tmp/etc/samba/smbpasswd
Configuration Share Folder
add later
Setup DD-WRT as Windows Name Server
If your network has more than one subnet, you might need to setup a Windows Name Server (WINS server), You can make you router become a WINS server even if you don't have a USB HDD or you don't need a sharing setup. Just user script like Anonymous Sharing Setup
but change the below setting in the [global]
section:
wins support = yes
Go to Setup/Basic section in DD-WRT and set WINS server in DHCP group to your LAN IP address (ex: 192.168.11.1)
If your network has any device that uses a static IP address, find the WINS section and point to DD-WRT LAN IP address (If you use Windows, choose properties of you adapter, click Advanced, goto WINS tag. If you use Linux, add wins server = xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
in [global]
section of samba)
Fix for WiFi Dropouts
Many users of Buffalo DD-WRT (v24SP2) routers, like me, experience frequent WiFi dropouts, even after tweaking WiFi settings for strong reliable signals.
This startup script monitors a WiFi-connected device on your network that is always on to monitor WiFi dropouts. If there are two missed pings, then it restarts the WiFi interface to restore the connection. The script has been modified from this one for Broadcom hardware, to get it to work on Atheros hardware.
To get startup scripts to run, you will first need to follow these instructions. I prefer the shell script method which, as the prerequisites list, requires that you you are set up for SSH (or Telnet) and SCP connections to the router. It also requires that you set up the jffs flash file system, so that you have somewhere permanent to store and run the script after reboots.
As with all startup scripts, you should first run this manually from a temporary location to make sure it is working correctly. Once you have it working properly, you can then make it a startup script (by giving it a '.startup' extension, making it executable (chmod to '700'), and placing it in /jffs/etc/config/ (or other auto startup directory)).
#!/bin/sh # This script fixes problems with intermittent dropouts of the WiFi radio. # It pings a Wifi client to monitor when the connection has dropped (2 missed pings) # It then closes and restarts the WiFi interface to restore WiFi connections. # Modified (for Atheros chips, e.g., Buffalo DD-WRT WZR-HP-G300NH) from: # http://www.dd-wrt.com/wiki/index.php/Useful_Scripts#Reset_Wireless_Radio # (Original script was for Broadcom chip, but Atheros has no 'wl' command) # A wireless client that should always be up, to monitor (modify this for your own network) CLIENT_IP=192.168.2.160 # Wireless interface that disappears # (The command below will generate this automatically # Should return 'atho' for Atheros hardware) INTERFACE=`nvram get wl0_ifname` # seconds between checks CHECK_EVERY=60 # seconds to wait after failed ping to try again FAIL_AGAIN=10 # after cycling, wait this many seconds (limits excessive refreshes if the monitored device is off) AFTER_CYCLE=9000 # Client must be up before starting main loop while true do if ping -c 1 ${CLIENT_IP} >/dev/null then echo "${CLIENT_UP} ok - begining main loop" break fi done # main script to restart wireless interface while sleep ${CHECK_EVERY} do if ping -c 1 ${CLIENT_IP} >/dev/null then echo "${CLIENT_IP} ok" else echo "${CLIENT_IP} dropped one" sleep ${FAIL_AGAIN} if ! ping -c 1 ${CLIENT_IP} >/dev/null then echo "${CLIENT_IP} dropped two, restarting ${INTERFACE} (WiFi)" # wl -i ${INTERFACE} down **** NO wl command for Atheros hardware, replace ifconfig ${INTERFACE} down sleep 3 # wl -i ${INTERFACE} up ifconfig ${INTERFACE} up sleep ${AFTER_CYCLE} fi fi done 2>&1
Debricking Info
There have been a few guides out that have reports of success when de-bricking the WZR-HP-G300NH. This however, has been explained by Brainslayer in this post, please use it for referencing info you may need to de-brick your unit, should the occasion arise.