aredn/README.md

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# Amateur Radio Emergency Data Network AREDN(tm) Firmware
http://www.arednmesh.org
## About AREDN
AREDN wireless networks are deployed by licensed Amateur Radio
operators, Technician Class or higher, under FCC Part 97 allocations
adjacent to FCC part 15, unlicensed, WIFI, allocations. They are
configured as ad-hoc nodes to form mesh networks. The firmware
created below enables the effective use of valuable and dedicated
frequencies for communication services to government and private
relief organizations in times of disaster or other emergencies.
Amateur Radio frequencies are relatively clean of noise from the commercial
allocations and ensure usability for Amateur Radio Operators. This firmware
enables 802.11n wireless networks to be created and expanded with minimal
to no pre-planning or IT expertise. A user can deploy a 'node' anywhere
to connect in and extend an AREDN network. Device hardware options exist to
provide sector coverage, build point-to-point links, and connect end
point services to the network. High speed link rates are routinely achieved
over long distances, e.g. 60Mbps+ on 10MHz channels over 80km links.
For further information on obtaining an Amateur Radio Technician Class
license, please refer to http://www.arrl.org/getting-your-technician-license
## Usage Information
### What to know about the images built with the instructions below
This is the 3.22.8.0 release.
### Images built
Device | target | Image to Use | RAM | Stability
------ | ------ | ------------ | --- | ---------
AirGrid XM | ar71xx | bullet-m | 32Mb | stable
AirGrid XW | ar71xx | loco-m-xw | 32Mb | stable
AirRouter | ath79 | airrouter | 32Mb | stable
AirRouter HP | ath79 | airrouter | 32Mb | stable
Bullet M2Ti/M5/M5Ti | ar71xx | bullet-m | 32Mb | stable
Bullet M2 | ath79 | bullet-m | 32Mb | stable
Bullet M2 XW | ath79 | bullet-m-xw | 64Mb | stable
LiteBeam M5 | ar71xx | lbe-m5 | 64Mb | stable
NanoBeam M2-13/M5-16/M5-19 | ar71xx | loco-m-xw | 32Mb | stable
NanoBridge 2G18 | ar71xx | bullet-m | 32Mb | stable
NanoBridge 5G22/25 | ar71xx | bullet-m | 32Mb | stable
NanoBridge M9 | ar71xx | bullet-m | 32Mb | stable
NanoStation Loco M2/M5/M9 XM | ar71xx | bullet-m | 32Mb | stable
NanoStation Loco M2 XW | ar71xx | loco-m-xw | 64Mb | stable
NanoStation Loco M5 XW with test date before ~Nov 2017| ar71xx | loco-m-xw | 64Mb | stable
NanoStation Loco M5 XW with test date on or after ~Nov 2017 | ar71xx | rocket-m-xw | 64Mb | stable
NanoStation M2/M3/M5 XM | ath79 | nanostation-m | 32Mb | stable
NanoStation M2/M5 XW | ath79 | nanostation-m-xw | 64Mb | stable
PicoStation M2 | ar71xx | bullet-m | 32Mb | stable
PowerBeam-M2-400 | ar71xx | loco-m-xw | 64Mb | stable
PowerBeam-M5-300 | ar71xx | loco-m-xw | 64Mb | stable
PowerBeam-M5-400/400ISO/620 | ar71xx | rocket-m-xw | 64Mb | stable
PowerBridge | ar71xx | nano-m | 64Mb | stable
Rocket M9/M2/M3/M5/M5GPS XM | ath79 | rocket-m | 64Mb | stable
Rocket M2/M5 XM with USB port | ar71xx | rocket-m | 64Mb | stable
Rocket M2 XW | ar71xx | loco-m-xw | 64Mb | stable
Rocket M5 XW | ar71xx | rocket-m-xw | 64Mb | stable
Rocket M2 Titanium TI | ar71xx | rocket-m-ti | 64Mb | unknown
Rocket M2 Titanium XW | ar71xx | rocket-m-xw | 64Mb | unknown
Rocket M5 Titanium TI | ar71xx | rocket-m-ti | 64Mb | stable
Rocket M5 Titanium XW | ar71xx | rocket-m-xw | 64Mb | stable
TPLink CPE210 v1.0/v1.1 | ath79 | cpe210-v1 | 64Mb | stable
TPLink CPE210 v2.0 | ath79 | cpe210-v2 | 64Mb | stable
TPLink CPE210 v3.0 | ath79 | cpe210-v3 | 64Mb | stable
TPLink CPE220 v2.0 | ath79 | cpe220-v2 | 64Mb | stable
TPLink CPE220 v3.0 | ath79 | cpe220-v3 | 64Mb | stable
TPLink CPE510 v1.0/v1.1 | ath79 | cpe510-v1 | 64Mb | stable
TPLink CPE510 v2.0 | ath79 | cpe510-v2 | 64Mb | stable
TPLink CPE510 v3.0 | ath79 | cpe510-v3 | 64Mb | stable
TPLink CPE610 v1.0 | ath79 | cpe610-v1 | 64Mb | stable
TPLink CPE610 v2.0 | ath79 | cpe610-v2 | 64Mb | stable
TPLink WBS210 v1.0 | ath79 | wbs210-v1 | 64mb | stable
TPLink WBS210 v2.0 | ath79 | wbs210-v2 | 64mb | stable
TPLink WBS510 v1.0 | ath79 | wbs510-v1 | 64mb | stable
TPLink WBS510 v2.0 | ath79 | wbs510-v2 | 64mb | stable
Mikrotik Basebox RB912UAG-5HPnD/2HPnD | ar71xx | mikrotik-nand-large | 64Mb | stable
Mikrotik hAP ac lite 952Ui-5ac2nD | ar71xx | mikrotik-rb-nor-flash-16M-ac | 64Mb | stable
Mikrotik RBLHG-2nD/5nD | ar71xx | mikrotik-rb-nor-flash-16M | 64Mb | stable
Mikrotik RBLHG-5HPnD | ar71xx | mikrotik-rb-nor-flash-16M | 64Mb | stable
Mikrotik RBLHG-2nD-XL/5HPnD-XL | ar71xx | mikrotik-rb-nor-flash-16M | 64Mb | stable
Mikrotik RBLDF-2nD/5nD | ar71xx | mikrotik-rb-nor-flash-16M | 64Mb | stable
Mikrotik QRT5 RB911G-5HPnD-QRT | ar71xx | mikrotik-nand-large | 64Mb | stable
Mikrotik mAntbox RB911G-2HPnD/5HPnD | ar71xx | mikrotik-nand-large | 64Mb | stable
Mikrotik SXTsq 5HPnD/5nD/2nD | ar71xx | mikrotik-rb-nor-flash-16M | 64Mb | stable
GL.iNet GL-AR150 | ath79 | gl-ar150 | 64Mb | stable
GL.iNet GL-USB150 | ar71xx | gl-usb150 | 64Mb | stable
GL.iNet GL-AR300M16 | ar71xx | gl-ar300m | 64Mb | stable
GL.iNet GL-AR300M w/ 128Mb NAND | None | None | 64Mb | Not compatible
GL.iNet GL-AR750 | ar71xx | gl-ar750 | 128Mb | stable
Meraki MR-16 | ar71xx | mr16 | 64mb | stable
The 'target' is a directory to find the image on at http://downloads.arednmesh.org
Latest Mikrotik installation options are found at: https://www.arednmesh.org/content/installation-instructions-mikrotik-devices
### Ethernet Port usage
The standard Ethernet port of an AREDN device uses the following vlan tags. An 802.1Q
switch is necessary to utilize the vlan tagged networks:
* untagged: LAN devices - laptop, ipcam, voip phone, etc.
* vlan 1: WAN - gateway to connect AREDN network to home network and/or internet (some devices support changing this vlan to an alternate value)
* vlan 2: DtDLink (device to device) - AREDN network routing between nodes, typically cross band
The following devices have enhanced Ethernet port usage. A single cat5 to the device
could be plugged into ether the 'main' or 'secondary' port with standard port functionality.
Both ports can be used interchangeably and simultaneously with LAN devices on both ports
at the same time.
If the device's hardware supports POE (Power Over Ethernet) pass-through from main port to secondary
port, an Advanced Setting option will show to turn on/off. This is useful to power ipCams or other
mesh nodes by daisy chaining the network cable from one device to another. Then only one network
cable may be needed to reach 2 or 3 devices on the tower. Be sure to check the power capacity in the
vendor specifications to not exceed. The first device in the chain will provide the DHCP address to
all LAN devices on all nodes (because it powers up first).
* NanoStation M2 XW
* NanoStation M5 XW
* NanoStation M2 XM
* NanoStation M3 XM
* NanoStation M5 XM
* TP-Link CPE210 v1/v1.1
* TP-Link CPE220 v2
* TP-Link CPE220 v3
* TP-Link CPE510 v1/v1.1
* TP-Link WBS210 v1
* TP-Link WBS210 v2
* TP-Link WBS510 v1
* TP-Link WBS510 v2
The Mikrotik hAP AC Lite, Ubiquiti AirRouter, and AirRouter HP are pre-configured with the following VLANs:
* Port 1: WAN Port - Packets in/out of this port are expected to be untagged. The node is (by default) configured to receive a DHCP assigned address from a home network, internet, or other foreign network.
* Port 5: DtDLink Port Mesh Routing -- Connect to another mesh node or 8021.q switch. Packets in/out of this port must be vlan 2 tagged, other packets are ignored.
* Ports 2-4: LAN devices -- Packets in/out of this port are expected to be untagged. The mesh node will (default) DHCP assign an IP address to your computer, ipCam, voip phone, etc. connected to these ports.
The GL.iNet GL-AR150 and GL-AR300M16 are pre-configured with the following VLANS:
* Port labeled "WAN": untagged = AREDN WAN
* Port labeled "LAN": untagged = AREDN LAN, vlan 2 = DtDLink (device to device)
The GL.iNet GL-AR750 is pre-configured with the following ports, left to right:
* Left Port with internet globe icon: WAN (untagged)
* Middle Port with "<..>" icon: DtDLink (vlan 2)
* Right Port with "<..>" icon: LAN (untagged)
IMPORTANT: For Gl.iNet devices, when initially installing AREDN on OpenWRT, you *MUST* uncheck the "Keep Settings" checkbox.
## Submitting Bug Reports
Please submit all issues to http://github.com/aredn/aredn/issues
## Developer Only Information
The AREDN firmware is based on OpenWrt with additional packages and patches.
A Makefile automates the entire process to create firmware images.
### Building with Docker
Installing the Docker environment on your windows/linux/mac machine is a pre-requisite. A docker 'container' has been pre-configured with an aredn linux build environment. Alternative instructions are below if you wish to setup your linux install with the compiler pre-requisites necessary to do the build.
To build with docker:
```
docker pull arednmesh/builder
docker run -it --name builder arednmesh/builder
```
To pull an image (or any other file) out of the docker container:
```
docker cp builder:/opt/aredn/aredn/firmware/targets/ar71xx/generic/<image>.bin <local directory>
```
### Build Prerequisites
Please take a look at the [OpenWrt documentation](https://openwrt.org/docs/guide-developer/build-system/install-buildsystem)
for a complete and up to date list of packages for your operating system.
On Ubuntu/Debian:
```
apt-get install git subversion build-essential libncurses5-dev \
zlib1g-dev gawk unzip libxml-perl flex wget gettext quilt \
python libssl-dev shellcheck lua5.1
```
On openSUSE:
```
zypper install --type pattern devel_basis
zypper install git subversion ncurses-devel zlib-devel gawk unzip \
perl-libxml-perl flex wget gettext-runtime quilt python \
libopenssl-devel shellcheck lua51
```
On Arch:
```
pacman -S base-devel subversion zlib unzip perl-xml-libxml wget \
quilt openssl shellcheck lua51 git
```
### Building firmware images
To obtain the source and build the firmware locally use:
```
bash
git clone https://github.com/aredn/aredn.git
cd aredn
vi config.mk # enter your callsign, etc.
# build default legacy ar71xx target ubnt and tplink images
make
# build and add legacy ar71xx target mikrotik images
make SUBTARGET=mikrotik
# build and add ath79 target (latest linux kernel) ubnt, tplink, and gl images
make MAINTARGET=ath79
```
Building the images may take minutes or hours depending on the machine.
For more details see [build options](https://openwrt.org/docs/guide-developer/build-system/use-buildsystem).
Review the build options in config.mk: `-j <number of cores + 1>`.
`V=s` will give more verbose error messages.
An internet connection is required during the build process. A good internet
connection can improve the build time.
You need approximately 10GB of space for the build.
### How to build prior builds of AREDN
Prior AREDN images can be rebuilt. Replace one of the following after
the "cd aredn" command above:
AREDN release 3.22.6.0
```
git checkout 3.22.6.0
```
AREDN release 3.21.4.0
```
git checkout 3.21.4.0
```
AREDN release 3.20.3.1
```
git checkout 3.20.3.1
```
AREDN release 3.20.3.0
```
git checkout 3.20.3.0
```
AREDN release 3.19.3.0
```
git checkout 3.19.3.0
```
AREDN release 3.18.9.0
```
git checkout 3.18.9.0
```
AREDN release 3.16.2.0
```
git checkout 3.16.2.0
```
AREDN release 3.16.1.1
```
git checkout 3.16.1.1-make
```
AREDN build 176
```
git checkout 91ee867
```
Return to most current changes
```
git checkout main
```
### Directory Layout
```
Included in the git Repo:
config.mk <- build settings
openwrt.mk <- which openwrt repo and branch/tag/commit to use
feeds.conf/ <- custom package feeds (edit to point to your clone of aredn_packages)
files/ <- file system in AREDN created images, most customizations go here
patches/ <- patches to openwrt go here
scripts/ <- tests and other scripts called from the build
configs/ <- definitions of features in the devices' kernel and what packages to include
Makefile <- the build definition
README.md <- this file
Created by the build:
openwrt/ <- cloned openwrt repository
firmware/ <- the build will place the images here
results/ <- code checks and other test results in jUnit xml format
```
### Patches with quilt
The patches directory contains quilt patches applied on top of the
openwrt git repo defined in config.mk.
If a patch is not yet included upstream, it can be placed in the `patches` directory with
the `quilt` tool. Please configure `quilt` as described in
[OpenWrt Quilt](https://openwrt.org/docs/guide-developer/build-system/use-patches-with-buildsystem).
#### Add, modify or delete a patch
Switch to the openwrt directory:
```bash
cd openwrt
```
Now you can use the `quilt` commands.
##### Example: add a patch
```bash
quilt push -a # apply all patches
quilt new 008-awesome.patch # tell quilt to create a new patch
quilt edit somedir/somefile1 # edit files
quilt edit somedir/somefile2
quilt refresh # creates/updates the patch file
```
## Submitting new features and patches to AREDN
The high level steps to submit to this repository https://github.com/aredn/aredn are:
1) create a github account and 'fork' this repo
2) git commit a change into your fork, e.g. http://github.com/ae6xe/aredn
3) create a pull request for http://github.com/aredn/aredn to consider your change