Am I right to assume that with Cake more bandwidth should be available to use, without affecting latency? -- Alec Robertson On Sun, Jul 26, 2015 at 10:11 AM, Alan Jenkins wrote: >>> Quick sub-question (off-topic so my apologies), this firmware I’m using that I linked to previously, has HTTPS enabled which means every time I go to Luci I get a security error in Chrome. How do I disable HTTPS? >> I would say you do not disable it, but rather look why chrome complains (it might be that chrome dislikes self-signed certificates) and try to convince chrome to accept the certificate nevertheless. Or you could try firefox ;) > Firefox is the definitely the simplest browser for this, it's the only > one I've used. Just click through the instructions. A "permanent > exception" is the default, which should actually help security. Feels > ironic as I remember Firefox moving first on this & hence complaints > about the scary warning messages etc. > Searching instructions for Chrome on Linux ("ssl exception" OR "self > signed certificate") they use a certutil command. Internet Explorer > will use the Windows cert store, same with Chrome on Windows. (If you > can add to the store using IE, that may be simplest & will cover both). > Additional requirement for those methods should be that the cert CN > matches the URL you access. Not sure about Chrome, but for general > paranoia you should check that CN / common name / "issued to" doesn't > say "*" i.e. "everywhere". > Access the router using `http://hostname` matching the router hostname > (as per /etc/config/system). dnsmasq will let that work. If you've > changed the hostname, re-gen the cert by removing it and restarting. > rm /etc/uhttpd.crt /etc/uhttpd.key > /etc/init.d/uhttpd restart > Alan