Godspeed for your next project, Dave. On Fri, Aug 24, 2018 at 10:11 PM Dave Taht wrote: > All: > > It is with some regret that I am announcing the closing of my > make-wifi-fast lab at the end of this month. > > Over the years we have relied on the donation of lab space from > ISC.org, georgia tech, the LINCs, and the University of Karstadt and > elsewhere - but my main base of operation has always been the > "yurtlab", in a campground deep in the los gatos hills where I could > both experiment and deploy wifi fixes[0] at scale. CeroWrt, in > particular, was made here. > > During the peak of the make-wifi-fast effort I rented additional space > on the same site, which at peak had over 30 routers in a crowded > space, competing. Which I (foolishly) kept, despite the additional > expense. Having heat in the winter and aircond in the summer was > helpful. > > With ongoing donations running at $90/month[1] - which doesn't even > cover bufferbloat.net's servers in the cloud - my biggest expense has > been keeping the lab at lupin open at $1800/mo. > > I kept the lab going through the sch_cake and openwrt 18.06 release > process, and I'm now several months behind on rent[3], and given how > things have gone for the past 2 years I don't see much use for it in > the future. Keeping it open, heated and dry in the winter has always > been a problem also. I'm also aware of a few larger, much better > equipped wifi labs that have thoroughly tested our "fq_codel for > wifi"[4] work that finally ends the "wifi performance anomaly". it's > in multiple commercial products now, we're seeing airtime fairness > being actually *marketed* as a wifi feature, and I kind of expect > deployment be universal across all mediatek mt76, and qualcomm ath9k > and ath10k based products in the next year or two. We won, big, on > wifi. Knocked it out of the park. Thanks all! > > Despite identifying all kinds of other work[5] that can be done to > make wifi better, no major (or even minor) direct sponsor has ever > emerged[2] for the make-wifi-fast project. We had a small grant from > comcast, a bit of support from nlnet also, I subsidized what I did > here from other work sources, toke had his PHD support, and all the > wonderful volunteers here... and that's it. > > Without me being able, also, to hire someone to keep the lab going, as > I freely admit to burnout and PTSD on perpetually reflashing and > reconfiguring routers... > > I'm closing up shop here to gather enough energy, finances, and time > for the next project, whatever it is. > > The make-wifi-fast mailing list and project will continue, efforts to > make more generic the new API also, and hopefully there's enough users > out there to > keep it all going forward without the kind of comprehensive testing I > used to do here. > > If anyone feels like reflashing, oh, 30 bricked routers of 8 different > models, from serial ports (in multiple cases, like the 6 uap-ac-lites, > via soldiering on headers), I'll gladly toss all the extra equipment > in the lab in a big box and ship them to you. Suggestions for a > suitable donation target are also of interest. > > The yurtlab has been an amazing, totally unique, unusual (and > sometimes embarrassing [6]) place to work and think, but it's time to > go. > > Perhaps I'll convince my amazingly supportive landlord to let me leave > behind a plaque: > > "On this spot bufferbloat on the internet and in WiFi was fixed, > 2011-2018". > > Sincerely, > Dave Taht > > [0] https://lwn.net/Articles/705884/ "How we made wifi fast again" > [1] https://www.patreon.com/dtaht > [2] Like adrian chadd's infamous flameout - I too, give up on wifi. > There's gotta be some other tech worth working on. What we shipped is > "good enough" to carry a few years though. > [3] This is not a passive-aggressive request for help making rent next > month, given all the other problems I have, it's best to close up shop > while I look for a new gig. > [4] https://arxiv.org/pdf/1703.00064.pdf "ending the wifi anomaly" > [5] > https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Se36svYE1Uzpppe1HWnEyat_sAGghB3kE285LElJBW4/edit# > [6] > https://www.cringely.com/2012/10/01/clothing-may-be-optional-but-bufferbloat-isnt/ > _______________________________________________ > Bloat mailing list > Bloat@lists.bufferbloat.net > https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/bloat >