GifGafIsTheBestGaf
Member
ASUS routers stay winning, my go-to brand personally and always my recommendation here on GAF.
ASUS routers stay winning, my go-to brand personally and always my recommendation here on GAF.
senese there are a lot of router people in here I'll ask:
Are there any good WIRED routers out their under $100? I already have a r7000, but all my cabling comes out in a wire closet thats far from the ideal spot for the wireless signal to be. its a 3000sqft home so I'd prefer the R7000 to just be an access point setup in the dead center open area (open concept home). I'd put a wired router in the wirecloset for connecting the modem to and handling all the eithernet runs in the house.
Can you not do a firmware backup?
Why wouldn't you just use a switch in the closet and put the R7000 wherever you want?
Shit my mom just bought one of these last week.
This is gonna eat up most of my evening...
A switch wouldnt work as the first connection point with the modem would it? You need to go Modem --> Router --> rest of your network (which can have multiple switches in it)
How would you go Modem ---> Switch ---> Network. No routing functions would be carried out, a switch is a dumb device. I know some modems can handle routing functions but mine is an absolute 100% dumb modem.
I like Asus routers a lot, too, but they also have some security flaws. You should probably get least change the firmware to Merlin (which is basically the regular Asus firmware with vulnerabilities patched).
A switch wouldnt work as the first connection point with the modem would it? You need to go Modem --> Router --> rest of your network (which can have multiple switches in it)
How would you go Modem ---> Switch ---> Network. No routing functions would be carried out, a switch is a dumb device. I know some modems can handle routing functions but mine is an absolute 100% dumb modem.
A switch wouldnt work as the first connection point with the modem would it? You need to go Modem --> Router --> rest of your network (which can have multiple switches in it)
How would you go Modem ---> Switch ---> Network. No routing functions would be carried out, a switch is a dumb device. I know some modems can handle routing functions but mine is an absolute 100% dumb modem.
Check your router for a vulnerability by going to http://[router-address]/cgi-bin/;uname$IFS-a in your browser (replacing [router-address] with your routers IP address). If that page shows anything but an error or an empty page, your router is affected.
If it is affected, you can terminate the web server process thats exploitable. However, this will kill the web configuration interface on your router until you reboot it. This shouldnt be a big deal unless you go into your routers management tool often. If youre okay with that, type this into your browsers URL: http://[router-address]/cgi-bin/;killall$IFShttpd and then head back to the URL in step one to verify it worked.
Thanks for bringing this to our attention OP.
When I setup my home office/lab I used this router: $52
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00YFJT29C/?tag=neogaf0e-20
and a Netgear ProSafe G116e but here is a G316 for $61.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produ...gclid=CKLcj6DA9NACFQGmaQodO-sIRw&gclsrc=aw.ds
The G116e is web-managed and $100
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16833122596
Thank you, that helps a lot. I have a 500 down/ 250 up conntention, will i hit speed limites with that setup (supposely the r7000 on regular firmeware is suppose to hit a ceiling around 450, 325 on WRT, but I still get around 480 down wired)
senese there are a lot of router people in here I'll ask:
Are there any good WIRED routers out their under $100? I already have a r7000, but all my cabling comes out in a wire closet thats far from the ideal spot for the wireless signal to be. its a 3000sqft home so I'd prefer the R7000 to just be an access point setup in the dead center open area (open concept home). I'd put a wired router in the wirecloset for connecting the modem to and handling all the eithernet runs in the house.
Thank you, that helps a lot. I have a 500 down/ 250 up conntention, will i hit speed limites with that setup (supposely the r7000 on regular firmeware is suppose to hit a ceiling around 450, 325 on WRT, but I still get around 480 down wired)
Check out Ubiquiti's Edgemax line of routers. They're wired routers and some of the best that you can get for the price (Ubiquiti is bascially prosumer- and even enterprise-grade hardware at very affordable prices).
Most of them are *pure* routers though, i.e. they don't really double as a switch (with the exception of the Edgerouter PoE, which has three of its five ports also providing switch functionality; that one is $175 though). In most cases, the Edgerouter X ($50) should suffice. If you have a 1Gbit/sec Internet connection such as Google Fiber, you'd better get an Edgerouter Lite, because the hardware of the Edgerouter X isn't powerful enough to do WAN/LAN routing at 1Gbit/sec. Otherwise, the Edgerouter X should be sufficient.
ASUS routers stay winning, my go-to brand personally and always my recommendation here on GAF.
Wrong thread bukkoElon Musk will invent a way to burn oil using solar panels.
Trying to download the beta patch and it's a .chk file. When it gets added to my download list and try to save it to my desktop it asks what application to open it with. What do I pick?
Netgear R7000, R6400, and R8000 models have been confirmed to be vulnerable, and other models, including the R7000P, R7500, R7800, R8500 R9000, have been reported by end users as being affected.
Trying to download the beta patch and it's a .chk file. When it gets added to my download list and try to save it to my desktop it asks what application to open it with. What do I pick?
http://arstechnica.com/security/201...e-been-pwned-thanks-to-easily-exploited-flaw/
http://blogs.harvard.edu/zeroday/2014/02/05/so-this-is-what-getting-pwned-is-like/
Anyone who plugged a hard drive into their router around the time it was vulnerable probably had someone access and copy everything. People were actively exploiting this and sharing huge lists of vulnerable IPs for quite a while.
For anyone looking at an edgerouter, research it first because it's not a plug and play device. Expect to spend hours or days setting it up. A lot of people configure them incorrectly as well because they don't know what they are doing and end up leaving their entire network wide open.
http://arstechnica.com/security/201...e-been-pwned-thanks-to-easily-exploited-flaw/
http://blogs.harvard.edu/zeroday/2014/02/05/so-this-is-what-getting-pwned-is-like/
Anyone who plugged a hard drive into their router around the time it was vulnerable probably had someone access and copy everything. People were actively exploiting this and sharing huge lists of vulnerable IPs for quite a while.
For anyone looking at an edgerouter, research it first because it's not a plug and play device. Expect to spend hours or days setting it up. A lot of people configure them incorrectly as well because they don't know what they are doing and end up leaving their entire network wide open.
senese there are a lot of router people in here I'll ask:
Are there any good WIRED routers out their under $100? I already have a r7000, but all my cabling comes out in a wire closet thats far from the ideal spot for the wireless signal to be. its a 3000sqft home so I'd prefer the R7000 to just be an access point setup in the dead center open area (open concept home). I'd put a wired router in the wirecloset for connecting the modem to and handling all the eithernet runs in the house.
I paid $350 for this crap? I can't trust them anymore. Wonder if they'll refund me.
WRT fucked up my Linksys Router a couple years ago.
Never using that again.
NVM - looks like they're all fucked.
This was in a Lifehacker article. Seems like even if your router doesn't have beta firmware available, there's a work around that will prevent this vulnerability.
It worked on mine. I don't see any update file either.I assumed the D7000 would be affected since the R7000 (router only version) is affected, but the proof of concept exploit didn't work for me. I'll check again when I get home but its possible it's omission from the list wasn't an oversight.
Thanks for the heads up OP, I have always wanted to play around with open source router firmware but have put it off. Thanks to this exploit, I went ahead and installed dd-wrt on my netgear r7000 today.
Most people have never even heard of the firmware you listed.
This was in a Lifehacker article. Seems like even if your router doesn't have beta firmware available, there's a work around that will prevent this vulnerability.
Wait, wait, wait. People own Netgear routers and don't use dd-wrt?
This was in a Lifehacker article. Seems like even if your router doesn't have beta firmware available, there's a work around that will prevent this vulnerability.
I just tried this with my R7000 and the page says "This site can't be reached.....refused to connect."
after i updated the firmware
it's now asking me to log in to the router instead of displaying anything
is this now fine?
i'm on r7000 too
but we got something different D: