

Tar.gz of filesystem image of openwrt root filesystemĮxt4 filesystem image (compressed) of openwrt root filesystem, same contents as above The kernel config file for the above kernel Here are the files in the directory: File Extension The x86-64 builds are at /snapshots/trunk/x86/64


x86-64 builds ¶Ĭurrently the features that I need are only in the in development “Chaos Calmer” (CC) release, so until it actually releases I am using “trunk” builds, which get generated on a (mostly) daily basis. Luckily openwrt is designed to be very modular and flexible, so whatever you plan to do it’s probably possibly without much extra effort. So it might take a little more work than the average openwrt router install.
Install Openwrt On X86 Pc install#
However, “PC” is a pretty broad term and depending on your particular hardware you might need to install particular kernel module packages, or make decisions about where and how things are installed, network devices are mapped, filesystem types, etc. For example, currently doing SQM on a ~100mbit cable modem link requires more CPU than embedded routers can provide. This is particularly interesting if you require hardware features that PC’s can provide that embedded routers cannot ( CPU, RAM, more network devices, storage, etc).
Install Openwrt On X86 Pc Pc#
But it’s also possible to install on normal x86 PC hardware, and the openwrt project provides builds for both x86 32bit and 64bit hardware. Most openwrt installs are on small embedded routers and you are working with a build for that particular router type that already includes the right kernel modules, knows about the flash size and layout, etc.
