Difference between revisions of "Mesh/Hardware support"

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(Created page with "sudo mesh wants to support a few different types of devices. This page lists the routers we want to support, ordered by appoximate priority.")
 
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sudo mesh wants to support a few different types of devices. This page lists the routers we want to support, ordered by appoximate priority.
sudo mesh wants to support a few different types of devices. This page lists the routers we want to support, ordered by approximate priority.
 
= First milestone =
 
Our first hardware support milestone includes the following devices.
 
== Ubiquiti Picostation 2 HP ==
 
We have about 70 of these. These were part of our first large purchase and have been the initial focus of our firmware efforts.
 
*Frequency: 2.4 ghz
*Chipset: AR2315
*Ram: 32 MB
*Flash: 8 MB
*Ethernet ports: 1 PoE
 
== Ubiquiti Nanostation M5 ==
 
The 5 ghz rooftop mesh backbone is initially being built primarily using Nanobridges and Nanostations and Rockets. Nanostations a are light and easy to install on e.g. flagpoles and can support maybe two or three connected Nanobridges.
 
*Frequency: 5 ghz
*Chipset: AR7xxx
*Ram: 32 MB
*Flash: 8 MB
*Ethernet ports: 1 PoE and 1 with optional PoE passthrough.
 
WARNING: Some of the older versions of these have a hardware bug that can kill the router the first time you enable the PoE passthrough.
 
== Ubiquiti Nanobridge M5 ==
 
The 5 ghz rooftop mesh backbone is being built primarily using Nanobridges and Nanostations. Nanobridges are our directional nodes. We connect them to other Nanobridges or to Nanostations.
 
*Frequency: 5 ghz
*Chipset: AR7xxx
*Ram: 32 MB
*Flash: 8 MB
*Ethernet ports: 1 PoE
 
== Ubiquiti Rocket M5 ==
 
Like a Nanostation, but antenna is better (and external and sold separately) and it has twice the ram and more CPU.
 
*Frequency: 5 ghz
*Chipset: AR7xxx
*Ram: 64 MB
*Flash: 8 MB + USB (port but not sure if USB works in OpenWRT)
*Ethernet ports: 1 PoE
 
== TP-LINK TL-WR703N / TL-MR3020 ==
 
These are the cheap indoor option. The TL-WR703N is $25 including shipping but is not FCC/CE certified. The TL-MR3020 is basically the same unit with a few extra LEDs and FCC/CE certification and costs $32 including shipping.
 
Both of these will need an external USB stick to work with our firmware. These can be had for ~$2.50 for 128 MB sticks and maybe $5.00 for 8 GB. We can probably get lower bulk prices from china.
 
*Frequency: 2.4 ghz
*Chipset: AR7240
*Ram: 32 MB
*Flash: 4 MB + USB port for additional storage.
*Ethernet ports: 1 non-PoE.
 
= Second milestone =
 
We're not yet sure exactly which platforms will be supported for our second milestone.
 
== Meraki Outdoor ==
 
We have a lot of these, but the Linux kernel currently has no support for their watchdog and it is enabled with a 5 minute timer per default. These are otherwise basically the same as the Picostation 2 HP, but with two ethernet ports and less power.
 
*Frequency: 2.4 ghz
*Chipset: AR2315
*Ethernet ports: 2
*Flash: 8 MB
*Max power: ~200 mW
 
== Ubiquiti Nanobeam M5 ==
 
This seems to be the replacement for the Nanobridge. Has nicer mounting bracket with 2D swivel joint. Not yet available for purchase.
 
*Frequency: 5 ghz
*Chipset: AR7xxx
*Ram: 64 MB
*Flash: 8 MB
*Ethernet ports: 1 PoE
 
= Third milestone =
 
No hard plans, but some ideas are:
 
*Generic x86 Linux-based desktop/laptop operating systems.
*Beagle Bone Black
*Raspberry Pi
 
= Fourth milestone =
 
Support a fully open hardware router (does not yet exist).

Revision as of 15:02, 13 January 2014

sudo mesh wants to support a few different types of devices. This page lists the routers we want to support, ordered by approximate priority.

First milestone

Our first hardware support milestone includes the following devices.

Ubiquiti Picostation 2 HP

We have about 70 of these. These were part of our first large purchase and have been the initial focus of our firmware efforts.

  • Frequency: 2.4 ghz
  • Chipset: AR2315
  • Ram: 32 MB
  • Flash: 8 MB
  • Ethernet ports: 1 PoE

Ubiquiti Nanostation M5

The 5 ghz rooftop mesh backbone is initially being built primarily using Nanobridges and Nanostations and Rockets. Nanostations a are light and easy to install on e.g. flagpoles and can support maybe two or three connected Nanobridges.

  • Frequency: 5 ghz
  • Chipset: AR7xxx
  • Ram: 32 MB
  • Flash: 8 MB
  • Ethernet ports: 1 PoE and 1 with optional PoE passthrough.

WARNING: Some of the older versions of these have a hardware bug that can kill the router the first time you enable the PoE passthrough.

Ubiquiti Nanobridge M5

The 5 ghz rooftop mesh backbone is being built primarily using Nanobridges and Nanostations. Nanobridges are our directional nodes. We connect them to other Nanobridges or to Nanostations.

  • Frequency: 5 ghz
  • Chipset: AR7xxx
  • Ram: 32 MB
  • Flash: 8 MB
  • Ethernet ports: 1 PoE

Ubiquiti Rocket M5

Like a Nanostation, but antenna is better (and external and sold separately) and it has twice the ram and more CPU.

  • Frequency: 5 ghz
  • Chipset: AR7xxx
  • Ram: 64 MB
  • Flash: 8 MB + USB (port but not sure if USB works in OpenWRT)
  • Ethernet ports: 1 PoE

TP-LINK TL-WR703N / TL-MR3020

These are the cheap indoor option. The TL-WR703N is $25 including shipping but is not FCC/CE certified. The TL-MR3020 is basically the same unit with a few extra LEDs and FCC/CE certification and costs $32 including shipping.

Both of these will need an external USB stick to work with our firmware. These can be had for ~$2.50 for 128 MB sticks and maybe $5.00 for 8 GB. We can probably get lower bulk prices from china.

  • Frequency: 2.4 ghz
  • Chipset: AR7240
  • Ram: 32 MB
  • Flash: 4 MB + USB port for additional storage.
  • Ethernet ports: 1 non-PoE.

Second milestone

We're not yet sure exactly which platforms will be supported for our second milestone.

Meraki Outdoor

We have a lot of these, but the Linux kernel currently has no support for their watchdog and it is enabled with a 5 minute timer per default. These are otherwise basically the same as the Picostation 2 HP, but with two ethernet ports and less power.

  • Frequency: 2.4 ghz
  • Chipset: AR2315
  • Ethernet ports: 2
  • Flash: 8 MB
  • Max power: ~200 mW

Ubiquiti Nanobeam M5

This seems to be the replacement for the Nanobridge. Has nicer mounting bracket with 2D swivel joint. Not yet available for purchase.

  • Frequency: 5 ghz
  • Chipset: AR7xxx
  • Ram: 64 MB
  • Flash: 8 MB
  • Ethernet ports: 1 PoE

Third milestone

No hard plans, but some ideas are:

  • Generic x86 Linux-based desktop/laptop operating systems.
  • Beagle Bone Black
  • Raspberry Pi

Fourth milestone

Support a fully open hardware router (does not yet exist).