Comparto con ustedes esta entrada donde explican como se puede incrementar el espacio disponible en este router TPLink con Openwrt
Fuente: http://ediy.com.my/blog/item/118-how-to-increase-storage-on-tp-link-tl-mr3020-with-extroot
The TP-Link TL-MR3020 N150 3G/4G Travel Router is a very small device with a size of 74mm x 67mm x 22mm, it has only 4MB flash and 32MB memory. The router have about 428KB (67%) space available after installing OpenWRT Barrier Breaker 14.07, you may encounter shortage of storage when installing certain extensions due to limited of router space.
By employing OpenWrt's extroot, you can expand the storage capacity of your root file system using the additional space of an added storage device.
Prerequisites
- TP-Link TL-MR3020 router must flashed with OpenWRT, I'm using Barrier Breaker 14.07 for my router.
- TP-Link TL-MR3020 router must connected to the internet. Click here for more information.
Preparing the flash drive
The first step is to format the flash drive with two partitions, the Ext4 & Linux Swap partition as shown in figure below. I'm using MiniTool Partition Wizard Free to format the flash drive.
After completing the formatting, eject the pen drive from the computer and plug it into the router.
Install required packages
Login to router via SSH and install all the required packages.
opkg install block-mount kmod-usb-storage kmod-fs-ext4 |
Chances are you will be seeing the following errors (failed to insert /lib/modules/3.10.49/ext4.ko). Just reboot the router without doing anything.
Configuring kmod-scsi-core.
kmod: failed to insert /lib/modules/3.10.49/sd_mod.ko Configuring kmod-usb-storage. Configuring kmod-crypto-hash. Configuring kmod-lib-crc16. Configuring block-mount. Configuring kmod-fs-ext4. kmod: failed to insert /lib/modules/3.10.49/ext4.ko |
Get the name of the flash drive
I,m using a 8GB falsh drive, it was /dev/sda1
root@OpenWrt:~# block info /dev/mtdblock2: UUID="20ad40ea-d33a421e-785b7d2d-ada99230" VERSION="4.0" TYPE="squashfs" /dev/mtdblock3: TYPE="jffs2" /dev/sda1: UUID="cdfd73b1-8c85-d001-c0f0-72b18c85d001" NAME="EXT_JOURNAL" VERSION="1.0" TYPE="ext4" /dev/sda2: VERSION="2" TYPE="swap" |
Copy the rootfs from flash memory to flash drive
After entering all the following command, the flash drive now has a copy of the router’s root filesystem on it.
mkdir /mnt/sda1
mount /dev/sda1 /mnt/sda1 mkdir -p /tmp/cproot mount --bind / /tmp/cproot tar -C /tmp/cproot -cvf - . | tar -C /mnt/sda1 -xf - umount /tmp/cproote |
Make the router boot from flash drive
Login to router via WinSCP and edit the /etc/config/fstab file. Below is my original configuration.
config 'global'
option anon_swap '0' option anon_mount '0' option auto_swap '1' option auto_mount '1' option delay_root '5' option check_fs '0'
config 'mount'
option target '/mnt/sda1' option uuid 'cdfd73b1-8c85-d001-c0f0-72b18c85d001' option enabled '0'
config 'swap'
option device '/dev/sda2' option enabled '0' |
Chage it to the following. Take note that target is changed from /mnt/sda1 to /
config 'global'
option anon_swap '1' option anon_mount '1' option auto_swap '1' option auto_mount '1' option delay_root '5' option check_fs '0'
config 'mount'
option target '/' option uuid 'cdfd73b1-8c85-d001-c0f0-72b18c85d001' option enabled '1'
config 'swap'
option device '/dev/sda2' option enabled '1' |
Reboot the router and check your space
root@OpenWrt:~# df -h
Filesystem Size Used Available Use% Mounted on rootfs 6.0G 7.4M 5.7G 0% / /dev/root 2.3M 2.3M 0 100% /rom tmpfs 14.1M 356.0K 13.7M 2% /tmp /dev/sda1 6.0G 7.4M 5.7G 0% / tmpfs 512.0K 0 512.0K 0% /dev |
Buenos días, tengo una consulta sobre este router. Si uno enchufa un pendrive con archivos, se pueden acceder a ellos mediante el cable de red?
ResponderEliminarHola Ramiro, como estas? Si realizás esto que se comenta en el artículo (router con sistema OpenWRT) vas a poder acceder a el sistema de archivos de ese pendrive (que corre el OpenWRT) y por lo tanto podrás acceder a tus archivos. Saludos.
ResponderEliminar