The ZyXEL GS1900-24 v1 is a 24 port switch with two SFP ports, similar to
the other GS1900 switches.
Specifications
--------------
* Device: ZyXEL GS1900-24 v1
* SoC: Realtek RTL8382M 500 MHz MIPS 4KEc
* Flash: 16 MiB
* RAM: Winbond W9751G8KB-25 64 MiB DDR2 SDRAM
* Ethernet: 24x 10/100/1000 Mbps, 2x SFP 100/1000 Mbps
* LEDs:
* 1 PWR LED (green, not configurable)
* 1 SYS LED (green, configurable)
* 24 ethernet port link/activity LEDs (green, SoC controlled)
* 2 SFP status/activity LEDs (green, SoC controlled)
* Buttons:
* 1 "RESET" button on front panel (soft reset)
* 1 button ('SW1') behind right hex grate (hardwired power-off)
* Power: 120-240V AC C13
* UART: Internal populated 10-pin header ('J5') providing RS232;
connected to SoC UART through a SIPEX 3232EC for voltage
level shifting.
* 'J5' RS232 Pinout (dot as pin 1):
2) SoC RXD
3) GND
10) SoC TXD
Serial connection parameters: 115200 8N1.
Installation
------------
OEM upgrade method:
* Log in to OEM management web interface
* Navigate to Maintenance > Firmware > Management
* If "Active Image" has the first option selected, OpenWrt will need to be
flashed to the "Active" partition. If the second option is selected,
OpenWrt will need to be flashed to the "Backup" partition.
* Navigate to Maintenance > Firmware > Upload
* Upload the openwrt-realtek-rtl838x-zyxel_gs1900-24-v1-initramfs-kernel.bin
file by your preferred method to the previously determined partition.
When prompted, select to boot from the newly flashed image, and reboot
the switch.
* Once OpenWrt has booted, scp the sysupgrade image to /tmp and flash it:
> sysupgrade /tmp/openwrt-realtek-rtl838x-zyxel_gs1900-24-v1-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin
U-Boot TFTP method:
* Configure your client with a static 192.168.1.x IP (e.g. 192.168.1.10).
* Set up a TFTP server on your client and make it serve the initramfs
image.
* Connect serial, power up the switch, interrupt U-boot by hitting the
space bar, and enable the network:
> rtk network on
> Since the GS1900-24 v1 is a dual-partition device, you want to keep the
OEM firmware on the backup partition for the time being. OpenWrt can
only be installed in the first partition anyway (hardcoded in the
DTS). To ensure we are set to boot from the first partition, issue the
following commands:
> setsys bootpartition 0
> savesys
* Download the image onto the device and boot from it:
> tftpboot 0x81f00000 192.168.1.10:openwrt-realtek-rtl838x-zyxel_gs1900-24-v1-initramfs-kernel.bin
> bootm
* Once OpenWrt has booted, scp the sysupgrade image to /tmp and flash it:
> sysupgrade /tmp/openwrt-realtek-rtl838x-zyxel_gs1900-24-v1-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin
Signed-off-by: Martin Kennedy <hurricos@gmail.com>
Add option to compile kmod-inet-diag, support for INET (TCP, DCCP, etc)
socket monitoring interface used by native Linux tools such as ss.
Signed-off-by: Tianling Shen <cnsztl@immortalwrt.org>
When porting mwan3 from iptables to nftables I tried the new translation
tool for ipset ipset-translate. I noticed that no IPv6 ipset can be
created with the tool. I have reported the problem to the upstream
project and the following patch fixes the problem.
Until this upsream is included in a new release, this patch should be
used in Openwrt.
https://lore.kernel.org/netfilter-devel/20220228190217.2256371-1-pablo@netfilter.org/T/#m09cc3cb738f2e42024c7aecf5b7240d9f6bbc19c
Signed-off-by: Florian Eckert <fe@dev.tdt.de>
Applies changes from 7774b86019 to new device committed later. Fix some
whitespace in the DTS. Use standard model name format in DTS.
Fixes: 6c743c3006 ("ramips: Add support for TP-Link TL-WPA8631P v3")
Signed-off-by: Joe Mullally <jwmullally@gmail.com>
Reported-by: Arınç ÜNAL <arinc.unal@arinc9.com>
Keep labels since OpenWrt userland tooling (get_dt_led) depends on them
to find the LED instances referenced by the led-* aliases.
The label for the amber power LED was removed in 4eefdc7adb.
Signed-off-by: Sven Schwermer <sven@svenschwermer.de>
MAC addresses on OEM firmware:
04:xx:xx:xx:xx:c8 factory 0x4 wlan2g
06:xx:xx:xx:xx:c8 [not on flash] wlan5g
Signed-off-by: Chukun Pan <amadeus@jmu.edu.cn>
The wireless mac address difference of this machine is similar
to that of D-Link DIR-853-R1, so use the same practice.
Signed-off-by: Chukun Pan <amadeus@jmu.edu.cn>
Dual-Q H721 is a router platform board, it is the smaller model of
the U7621-06.
The device has the following specifications:
MT7621AT (880 MHz)
256 of RAM (DDR3)
16 MB of FLASH (MX25l12805d SPI)
5x 1 Gbps Ethernet (MT7621 built-in switch)
1x M.2 (NGFF) 3.7V 3A max for 5G M.2 Modem work at USB3.0 mode
1x Minipcie 3.7V 3A max for LTE Modem work at USB2.0 Mode
2x Minipcie for WIFI card
4x Lan+1x Wan 10/100M/1000M RJ45 port
14x LEDs (1x GPIO-controlled)
1x reset button
1x UART header (4-pins)
1x mico SD-card reader
1x DC jack for main power (5~27 V)
The following has been tested and is working:
Ethernet switch
miniPCIe slots (tested with Wi-Fi cards and LTE modem cards)
miniSIM slot (works with normal size simcard)
sysupgrade
reset button
micro SD-card reader
Installation:
This board has no locked down bootloader. The seller can be asked to
install openwrt, so upgrades are standard sysupgrade method.
Recovery:
This board contains a Chinese, closed-source bootloader called Breed
(Boot and Recovery Environment for Embedded Devices). Breed supports web
recovery and to enter it, you keep the reset button pressed for around
5 seconds during boot. Your machine will be assigned an IP through DHCP
and the router will use IP address 192.168.1.1. The recovery website is
in Chinese, but is easy to use. Click on the second item in the list to
access the recovery page, then the second item on the next page is where
you select the firmware. In order to start the recovery, you click the
button at the bottom.
Signed-off-by: Dawsen Gao <dawsen_gao@163.com>
[change author name (used SoB one), add ethernet pinctrl,
apply sorting to device recipe]
Signed-off-by: Sungbo Eo <mans0n@gorani.run>
OpenWrt uses a lot of (b)ash scripts for initial setup. This isn't the
best solution as they almost never consider syncing files / data. Still
this is what we have and we need to try living with it.
Without proper syncing OpenWrt can easily get into an inconsistent state
on power cut. It's because:
1. Actual (flash) inode and data writes are not synchronized
2. Data writeback can take up to 30 seconds (dirty_expire_centisecs)
3. ubifs adds extra 5 seconds (dirty_writeback_centisecs) "delay"
Some possible cases (examples) for new files:
1. Power cut during 5 seconds after write() can result in all data loss
2. Power cut happening between 5 and 35 seconds after write() can result
in empty file (inode flushed after 5 seconds, data flush queued)
Above affects e.g. uci-defaults. After executing some migration script
it may get deleted (whited out) without generated data getting actually
written. Power cut will result in missing data and deleted file.
There are three ways of dealing with that:
1. Rewriting all user-space init to proper C with syncs
2. Trying bash hacks (like creating tmp files & moving them)
3. Adding sync and hoping for no power cut during critical section
This change introduces the last solution that is the simplest. It
reduces time during which things may go wrong from ~35 seconds to
probably less than a second. Of course it applies only to IO operations
performed before /etc/init.d/boot . It's probably the stage when the
most new files get created.
All later changes are usually done using smarter C apps (e.g. busybox or
uci) that creates tmp files and uses rename() that is expected to be
atomic.
Signed-off-by: Rafał Miłecki <rafal@milecki.pl>
Acked-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
Acked-by: Sergey Ryazanov <ryazanov.s.a@gmail.com>
Modems used in ZTE mobile broadband routers require to query the data
session status using the same CID as one used to establish the session,
otherwise they will report the session as "disconnected" despite
reporting correct PDH in previous step. Without this change, IPv6
connection on these modems doesn't establish properly. In IPv4 this bug
is present as well, but for some reason querying of IPv4 status works
using temporary CID, this however seems noncompliant with QMI
specifications, so fix it as well.
Signed-off-by: Lech Perczak <lech.perczak@gmail.com>
The ChipIdea USB kernel driver gained support for disabling glue drivers
in 5.8, see upstream commmit: 95caa2ae70fd ("usb: chipidea: allow
disabling glue drivers if EMBEDDED").
This enables 'CONFIG_USB_CHIPIDEA_IMX' in the 'imx' target kernel config
which brings back USB support.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Dymacz <pepe2k@gmail.com>
This driver is needed to boot from CompactFlash on the Siemens Futro S400.
The device has an AMD NX1500 CPU, which seems to be unsupported by the
geode subtarget, so it must use legacy.
Signed-off-by: Matthias Schiffer <mschiffer@universe-factory.net>
Add patch found in Teltonika RUT9_R_00.07.01.4 GPL SDK download[1]
adding USB IDs of the MeigLink SLM750 to the relevant kernel drivers.
Newer versions of Teltonika's 2G/3G/4G RUT9XX WWAN router series come
with this kind of modem.
[1]: https://wiki.teltonika-networks.com/view/GPL
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Previously libxt_socket.so was included in iptables-mod-tproxy. It was
missed out when trying to make kmod-ipt-socket and kmod-ipt-tproxy
separate packages
Fixes: 4f443c88 ("netfilter: separate packages for kmod-ipt-socket and kmod-ipt-tproxy")
Signed-off-by: Yousong Zhou <yszhou4tech@gmail.com>
Artifacts can only be uploaded from inside the GITHUB_WORKSPACE. While
the Linux CI jobs run inside that per default, a special case-sensitive
mount outside the GITHUB_WORKSPACE is used for macOS builds.
To make log artifacts work for both macOS and Linux, move logs/ folder
to GITHUB_WORKSPACE on failures.
Signed-off-by: Paul Spooren <mail@aparcar.org>
By switching EPHY_LED4_N_JTRST_N from EPHY_LED4_N to GPIO#39
we can control USB port power an all current revisions of MR3020v3.
It was not a thing on some first revisions, pin was unused.
But for now on all current MR3020v3 boards EPHY_LED4_N_JTRST_N pin
is connected to USB power key.
Also it was not used as EPHY indicator on any revision of the board.
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Chigiryov <dmitry.chigiryov@ya.ru>
[changed author address (used SoB one)]
Signed-off-by: Sungbo Eo <mans0n@gorani.run>
In commit ee66fe4ea9 ("ramips: convert DEVICE_TITLE to new variables"),
DEVICE_VENDOR of some unbranded devices were set incorrectly:
* WR512-3GN is not a dev board from Ralink.
* "XDX-RN502J" is the whole model name and should be not split.
This patch sets their DEVICE_VENDOR to "Unbranded", and changes their DTS
model properties accordingly.
Ref: d0bf15f235 ("ramips: add support for A5-V11 board (resubmit)")
Ref: 9085b05d9e ("ramips: rt305x: support for wr512-3gn-like routers")
Ref: 0e486d2fd2 ("ramips: add support for unbranded XDX-RN502J board")
Signed-off-by: Sungbo Eo <mans0n@gorani.run>
Zbtlink ZBT-WG1608 is a Wi-Fi router intendent to use with WWAN (4G/5G)
modems.
Specifications:
* SoC: MediaTek MT7621A
* RAM: 256/512 MiB
* Flash: 16/32 MiB (SPI NOR)
* Wi-Fi:
* MediaTek MT7603E : 2.4Ghz
* MediaTek MT7613BE : 5Ghz
* Ethernet: 10/100/1000 Mbps Ethernet x5 ports (4xLAN + WAN)
* M.2: 1x slot with USB&SIM
* EM7455/EM12-G/EM160R/RM500Q-AE
* USB: 1x 3.0 Type-A port
* External storage: 1x microSD (SDXC) slot
* UART: console (115200 baud)
* LED:
* 1 power indicator
* 1 WLAN 2.4G controlled (wlan 2G)
* 3 SoC controlled (wlan 5G, wwan, internet)
* 5 per Eth phy (4xLAN + WAN)
MAC Addresses:
* LAN : f8:5e:3c:xx:xx:e0 (Factory, 0xe000 (hex))
* WAN : f8:5e:3c:xx:xx:e1 (Factory, 0xe006 (hex))
* 2.4 GHz: f8:5e:3c:xx:xx:de (Factory, 0x0004 (hex))
* 5 GHz : f8:5e:3c:xx:xx:df (Factory, 0x8004 (hex))
Installation:
* Vendor's firmware is OpenWrt (LEDE) based, so the sysupgrade image can
be directly used to install OpenWrt. Firmware must be upgraded using the
'force' and 'do not save configuration' command line options (or
correspondig web interface checkboxes) since the vendor firmware is from
the pre-DSA era.
Recovery Mode:
* Press reset button, power up the device, wait for about 10sec.
* Upload sysupgrade image through the firmware recovery mode web page at
192.168.1.1.
Signed-off-by: Kim Namu <namu@theseed.io>
Asus RT-AC1200 is a 2.4/5GHz dual band AC router,
based on MediaTek MT7628AN.
Specification:
* SoC: MT7628AN
* RAM: DDR2 64 MiB
* Flash: 16 MiB NOR (W25Q128BV)
* Wi-Fi:
* 2.4GHz: SoC Built-in
* 5GHz: MT7612EN
* Ethernet: 5x 100Mbps
* Switch: SoC built-in
* USB: 1x 2.0
Flash Layout:
0x0000000-0x0030000 : "bootloader"
0x0030000-0x0040000 : "nvram"
0x0040000-0x0050000 : "factory"
0x0050000-0x1000000 : "firmware"
MAC address:
LAN: factory 0x28
WAN: factory 0x22
2.4G: factory 0x4
5G: factory 0x8004
Installation via **recovery** mode:
1. Download the Asus recovery firmware (windows) tool from
http://dlcdnet.asus.com/pub/ASUS/LiveUpdate/Release/Wireless/Rescue.zip
2. Set your ethernet IP manually 192.168.1.5 / 255.255.255.0 with NO
gateway.
3. Plug in your ethernet to LAN port 1 on the router.
4. Load up the recovery software with the firmware file, but don't press
"Upload" yet.
5. Plug in the router to power WHILE HOLDING the reset button in. While
CONTINUING to hold the button, select "Upload" Continue to hold the
reset button in until it finishes and verifies!
6. If that doesn't work try pressing "Upload" first just before you do
step 5. At some point while holding reset the rescue tool will finally
detect and upload the firmware. That's when you can let go of the
reset button.
7. The router will reboot and not much will happen. Wait a minute or 2.
8. Power off and on the router again. Voila. Set everything your Ethernet
IP back to DHCP (automatically) and you're good to go.
Revert to stock firmware:
1. Install stock image via recovery mode.
Tested-by: Ivan Pavlov <AuthorReflex@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ray Wang <raywang777@foxmail.com>
Zip always try to generate new encryption header depending on execution
time and process id, which is far from being reproducible. This commit
changes the zip srand() seed to a predictable value to generate
reproducible random bytes for the encryption header. This will compromise
the goal of secure archive encryption, but it would not be a big problem
for our purpose.
Signed-off-by: Sungbo Eo <mans0n@gorani.run>
Remove "--mtime" option introduced in commit 18c9faa032 ("tools: zip:
add option for reproducible archives") and instead fetch SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH
environment variable directly in the code.
Ref: https://sourceforge.net/p/infozip/patches/25/
Signed-off-by: Sungbo Eo <mans0n@gorani.run>
Zip uses DOS timestamp for mtime which is stored in local time and hence
depends on the timezone of the build system. Force zip to use UTC timezone
to make image builds more reproducible.
Signed-off-by: Sungbo Eo <mans0n@gorani.run>
This adds support for the Renkforce WS-WN530HP3-A ceiling-
mountable Wireless Access Point, which is powered over PoE.
Hardware:
- SoC: Mediatek MT7621DAT
- RAM: 128MiB on SoC
- Flash: 16MiB GigaDevice GD25Q128C
- 2.4Ghz Wifi: Mediatek MT603EN
- 5GHz Wifi: MT613BEN
- Ethernet:
- 1x 1GBit WAN port, passive PoE capable
- 2x 1GBit LAN ports
LEDs: 1x Bi-Color LED (red/blue)
Buttons: 1x Reset Button, 1x Power Button
Installation:
Power on the access point and immedately press the reset
button for 10 seconds. Connect web-browser to 192.168.10.1
and upload sysupgrade image. Flash uploaded image and wait
about 2 minutes for reboot.
Signed-off-by: Birger Koblitz <mail@birger-koblitz.de>
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz> [fixed SoB]
These were present in ar71xx but overlooked when porting to ath79.
Fixes: 480bf28273 ("ath79: add support for Buffalo WZR-HP-AG300H")
Signed-off-by: Jeffery To <jeffery.to@gmail.com>
The MikroTik RouterBOARD mAPL-2nd (sold as mAP Lite) is a small
2.4 GHz 802.11b/g/n PoE-capable AP.
See https://mikrotik.com/product/RBmAPL-2nD for more info.
Specifications:
- SoC: Qualcomm Atheros QCA9533
- RAM: 64 MB
- Storage: 16 MB NOR
- Wireless: Atheros AR9531 (SoC) 802.11b/g/n 2x2:2, 1.5 dBi antenna
- Ethernet: Atheros AR8229 (SoC), 1x 10/100 port, 802.3af/at PoE in
- 4 user-controllable LEDs:
· 1x power (green)
· 1x user (green)
· 1x lan (green)
· 1x wlan (green)
Flashing:
TFTP boot initramfs image and then perform sysupgrade. Follow common
MikroTik procedure as in https://openwrt.org/toh/mikrotik/common.
Note: following 781d4bfb39
The network setup avoids using the integrated switch and connects the
single Ethernet port directly. This way, link speed (10/100 Mbps) is
properly reported by eth0.
Signed-off-by: Thibaut VARÈNE <hacks@slashdirt.org>
Add kmod-ramoops to the default set of device packages in
R7800 and XR500, so that the ramoops kernel crash logs
are provided by default for these routers.
The capability was earlier defined by 97158fe1 and cf346dfa,
but the feature was not yet turned on by default.
The possible kernel crashes are stored into /sys/fs/pstore/*
Signed-off-by: Hannu Nyman <hannu.nyman@iki.fi>
In addition to the missing green LED definition, the polarity of the
amber power LED was incorrect which is fixed here.
Signed-off-by: Sven Schwermer <sven@svenschwermer.de>
The skb->len field is read after the packet is sent to the network
stack. In the meantime, skb can be freed. This patch fixes this bug.
Signed-off-by: Aleksander Jan Bajkowski <olek2@wp.pl>
This patch adds the device-specific configuration to u-boot-envtools for
I-O DATA BSH-G24MB switch.
Signed-off-by: INAGAKI Hiroshi <musashino.open@gmail.com>
I-O DATA BSH-G24MB is a 24 port gigabit switch, based on RTL8382M.
Specification:
- SoC : Realtek RTL8382M
- RAM : DDR2 128 MiB (Nanya NT5TU128M8HE-AC)
- Flash : SPI-NOR 16 MiB (Macronix MX25L12835FM2I-10G)
- Ethernet : 10/100/1000 Mbps x24
- port 1-8 : RTL8218B
- port 9-16 : RTL8218B (SoC)
- port 17-24 : RTL8218B
- LEDs/Keys : 2x, 1x
- UART : pin header on PCB
- JP2: 3.3V, TX, RX, GND from rear side
- 115200n8
- Power : 100 VAC, 50/60 Hz
- Plug : IEC 60320-C13
Flash instruction using sysupgrade image:
1. Boot BSH-G24MB normally
2. Connect BSH-G24MB to the DHCP enabled network
3. Find the device's IP address and open the WebUI and login
Note: by default, the device obtains IP address from DHCP server of
the network
4. Open firmware update page ("ファームウェア アップデート")
5. Rename the OpenWrt sysupgrade image to "bsh-g24mb_v100.image" and
select it
6. Press apply ("適用") button to perform update
7. Wait ~150 seconds to complete flashing
Note:
- BSH-G24MB has a power-related LED ("電源"), but it's not connected to
the GPIO of the SoC or RTL8231 and cannot be controlled. Instead of
it, use system status LED on other than running-state.
- "sys_loop" LED indicates system status and loop-detection status in
stock firmware.
- BSH-G24MB has 2x os-image partitions named as "RUNTIME"/"RUNTIME2" in
16 MiB SPI-NOR flash and the size of image per partition is only
6848 KiB. The secondary image is never used on stock firmware, so also
use it on OpenWrt to get more space.
Signed-off-by: INAGAKI Hiroshi <musashino.open@gmail.com>
This switches the iwlwifi-firmware-ax200 file to API version 66, this is
the most recent version supported by our driver.
The following files used in OpenWrt changed:
amdgpu-firmware/lib/firmware/amdgpu/yellow_carp_dmcub.bin
ar3k-firmware/lib/firmware/qca/nvm_usb_00130201.bin
ar3k-firmware/lib/firmware/qca/nvm_usb_00130201_010a.bin
ar3k-firmware/lib/firmware/qca/nvm_usb_00130201_010b.bin
ar3k-firmware/lib/firmware/qca/nvm_usb_00130201_0303.bin
ar3k-firmware/lib/firmware/qca/nvm_usb_00130201_gf.bin
ar3k-firmware/lib/firmware/qca/nvm_usb_00130201_gf_010a.bin
ar3k-firmware/lib/firmware/qca/nvm_usb_00130201_gf_010b.bin
ar3k-firmware/lib/firmware/qca/nvm_usb_00130201_gf_0303.bin
ar3k-firmware/lib/firmware/qca/rampatch_usb_00130200.bin
ar3k-firmware/lib/firmware/qca/rampatch_usb_00130201.bin
iwlwifi-firmware-ax200/lib/firmware/iwlwifi-cc-a0-66.ucode
iwlwifi-firmware-ax210/lib/firmware/iwlwifi-ty-a0-gf-a0-66.ucode
iwlwifi-firmware-ax210/lib/firmware/iwlwifi-ty-a0-gf-a0.pnvm
iwlwifi-firmware-iwl9000/lib/firmware/iwlwifi-9000-pu-b0-jf-b0-46.ucode
iwlwifi-firmware-iwl9260/lib/firmware/iwlwifi-9260-th-b0-jf-b0-46.ucode
rtl8822ce-firmware/lib/firmware/rtw88/rtw8822c_fw.bin
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
exit in preinit script was stopping whole process
Fixes: 93259e8ca2 ("bcm4908: support "rootfs_data" on U-Boot devices")
Signed-off-by: Rafał Miłecki <rafal@milecki.pl>
3276aed81c73 move run_cmd() to main.c
558eabc13c64 map: move dns host based lookup code to a separate function
6ff06d66c36c dns: add code for snooping dns packets
a78bd43c4a54 ubus: remove dnsmasq subscriber
9773ffa70f1f map: process dns patterns in the order in which they were defined
f13b67c9a786 dns: allow limiting dns entry matching to cname name
Signed-off-by: Felix Fietkau <nbd@nbd.name>
Ensures that the DSA driver sets exactly the same default flags as the
bridge when a port joins or leaves. Without this we end up with a
confusing flag mismatch, where DSA and bridge ports use different sets
of flags.
This is critical as the "learning" mismatch will be harmful to the
network, causing all traffic to be flooded on all ports.
The original commit was buggy, trying to set the flags one-by-one in a
loop. This was not supported by the API and the end result was that
all but the last flag were cleared. This bug was implicitly fixed
upstream by commit e18f4c18ab5b ("net: switchdev: pass flags and mask
to both {PRE_,}BRIDGE_FLAGS attributes").
This is a minimum temporary stop measure fix for the critical lack of
"learning" only. The major API change associated with a full v5.12+
backport is neither required nor wanted. A simpler fix, moving the
call to dsa_port_bridge_flags() out of the loop, has therefore been
merged into this modified backport.
Fixes: afa3ab54c0 ("realtek: Backport bridge configuration for DSA")
Signed-off-by: Bjørn Mork <bjorn@mork.no>
Acked-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Tested-by: Stijn Tintel <stijn@linux-ipv6.be>
[fix typos in commit message]
Signed-off-by: Stijn Tintel <stijn@linux-ipv6.be>