OpenWrt (OPEN Wireless RouTer) is an open source project for embedded operating systems based on Linux, primarily used on embedded devices to route network traffic. The main components are Linux, util-linux, musl, and BusyBox.

研究了下 IGMP Snooping 这个东西,OpenWRT 官网是这么说的: When a host wants to start receiving UDP multicast traffic, it needs to subscribe itself to a "UDP multicast group". Control of multicast groups is archived with IGMP protocol. Once a host is subscribed, all the traffic for this group is sent to it using broadcast L2 frames. Multicast still uses g speeds so the available physical rates are 6, 9, 12, 18, 24, 36, 48 and 54Mbps. Most APs are going to default to the slower speeds so being able to disable them to force it to use the higher rates will give a huge speed up. Being able to set this is probably the most important criterion for a multicast AP. Primary router runs OpenWRT, other is an ASUS RT-N66U. I now have a RaspberryPi on the network with MiniDLNA. Unfortunately, the TV connected to the ASUS router cannot see this DLNA server. ASUS is on IP 192.168.0.10 with its own DHCP for stuff on that side of the network, in the 192.168.1.x range. In OpenWRT: I also googled a lot, but only found one person with similar problems on OnePlus devices (also OpenWrt 802.11r), which can be found in the thread at the beginning. Does anyone of you use a similar setup (802.11r, ideally OpenWrt, Android 10) and can report the same behaviour? I'm still not convinced whether this is an Android or an OpenWrt issue.

Introduction This HowTo attempts to give some insight into the basics of setting up multicast routing. Both static multicast routing, with SMCRoute, and dynamic multicast routing, with mrouted and pimd. For some use-cases, in particular link-local multicast, it may not be possible to use multicast routing, then I recommend trying out: Bridging networks, see bridge(8) or Linux bridge - how it

研究了下 IGMP Snooping 这个东西,OpenWRT 官网是这么说的: When a host wants to start receiving UDP multicast traffic, it needs to subscribe itself to a "UDP multicast group". Control of multicast groups is archived with IGMP protocol. Once a host is subscribed, all the traffic for this group is sent to it using broadcast L2 frames. Multicast still uses g speeds so the available physical rates are 6, 9, 12, 18, 24, 36, 48 and 54Mbps. Most APs are going to default to the slower speeds so being able to disable them to force it to use the higher rates will give a huge speed up. Being able to set this is probably the most important criterion for a multicast AP.

OpenWrt. Sebastian, our core developer, is on travel these days, but will be back next week. He'll probably have more to say on the next steps. Best regards, thomas > -- > You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google > Groups "Multicast Proxy" group. > To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send

I too am struggling to get my YouView box working with BT's multicast internet channels. Just bought a TP-Link Archer C7 and immediately updated the firmware to OpenWrt.