Difference between revisions of "HOWTO:Install OpenWRT"
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== Summary == | == Summary == | ||
This is a quick overview of the very easy process of installing the [[OpenWRT]] open source firmware into a LinkSys WRT54GL. Several much more detailed sources of documentation exist on this [http://wiki.openwrt.org/OpenWrtDocs/Installing] [http://wiki.openwrt.org/InstallingWrt54gl], but we include the bare essentials here for simplicity's sake and also because the bulk of OpenWRT does not interest us--it only provides us with a working open-source implementation of an embedded operating system on the router. | This is a quick overview of the very easy process of installing the [[OpenWRT]] open source firmware into a LinkSys WRT54GL. Several much more detailed sources of documentation exist on this [http://wiki.openwrt.org/OpenWrtDocs/Installing] [http://wiki.openwrt.org/InstallingWrt54gl], but we include the bare essentials here for simplicity's sake and also because the bulk of OpenWRT does not interest us--it only provides us with a working open-source implementation of an embedded operating system on the router. |
Latest revision as of 03:28, 19 December 2008
Contents
Summary
This is a quick overview of the very easy process of installing the OpenWRT open source firmware into a LinkSys WRT54GL. Several much more detailed sources of documentation exist on this [1] [2], but we include the bare essentials here for simplicity's sake and also because the bulk of OpenWRT does not interest us--it only provides us with a working open-source implementation of an embedded operating system on the router.
OpenWRT provides a mature environment for exploring your router hardware, but is not required to run XINU.
Before Starting
Download OpenWRT Binary
Get the latest OpenWRT binary from http://downloads.openwrt.org/whiterussian/newest/bin/. The correct file is openwrt-wrt54g-squashfs.bin
Steps to Install OpenWRT
- Connect to the LinkSys web interface by visiting its address (default 192.168.1.1) in a web browser.
- Upload the OpenWRT file as a "firmware update".
- Watch as your router magically transforms into an OpenWRT-running box.
What to do next?
First it is a good idea to play around with the OpenWRT installation and get a feel for its web interface. You can also login via ssh to the router and poke around its directory structure.
The next big step towards a custom operating system on the router is covered in the next HOWTO in which we will modify the LinkSys hardware