I'm running OpenWrt on the Unifi AC Mesh access point; (it has an ath10k chip). It sits on a pole above my ridgeline and provides service to my house and yard. I dunno what the state in the Ubiquity provided firmware is. OpenWrt has the nice new wifi code in it, which indeed really fixes bufferbloat. As I also have an ath9k in my laptop and run Linux, I now even do (previously insane) things like have my scheduled backups go over WiFi while teleconferencing, and I'm a happy camper. Getting OpenWrt installed on it the first time is a bit of a chore; I have some notes around someplace on what I learned when I did the install. - Jim On Thu, May 23, 2019 at 2:46 PM David P. Reed wrote: > I have been chatting with a startup in the Multi-User Dwelling networking > operations space, and they seem to really be attracted to Ubiquiti Unifi > systems. I can't blame them for wanting a comprehensive and evolving system. > > > > But on the questions related to bufferbloat and making wifi both low > latency and fast, I really don't know much about these products. (I have a > Unifi 10 Gb/sec switch as my home/lab fiber backbone, but that's not really > relevant to answering this question). > > > > So, since you, Dave, and others have been talking about real-world > fq_codel etc. and faster wifi scheduling, does anyone know what the status > at Ubiquiti is? > > > > I know some here run OpenWRT/LEDE on Unifi APs, but that's not my > question, really. > > > > Any knowledge out there? > > > > (I'd like to recommend that they run some actual load tests - flent RRUL, > etc. - but I think they might need some help). > > Personally I have no stake whatever in their use, but I'd love to get > someone to start solving the bloat and queueing/scheduling problems. > > > _______________________________________________ > Make-wifi-fast mailing list > Make-wifi-fast@lists.bufferbloat.net > https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/make-wifi-fast