DAWN
radare2
DAWN | radare2 | |
---|---|---|
12 | 9 | |
344 | 19,679 | |
0.6% | 1.0% | |
3.0 | 9.9 | |
8 months ago | 2 days ago | |
C | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
DAWN
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DAWN - the BSS transition controller - and tips on making it work properly
It is very important to get up to speed with the basics by going through this website first and foremost: https://github.com/berlin-open-wireless-lab/DAWN
- I tried out DAWN and it's working great. Single AP, single SSID.
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My new discovery: Decentralized Wireless Management
By the way, which degree of configuration did you set up? https://github.com/berlin-open-wireless-lab/DAWN/blob/master/CONFIGURE.md
- OpenWRT for meshnet and 200 devices?
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Recommended settings for Wi-Fi routers and access points
It's not out-of-the-box perfect, but I've had decent luck using DAWN, which targets openwrt, to get decent bandsteering. I can always ssh in (I personally havent been interested in installing/trying the "luci" web interface) & move someone between bands if I need to.
Also, this setup works across & steers clients between my multiple access points!
It's amazing being able to ssh in and see a map of what signals each AP sees. DAWN periodically asks clients to help map, so even if the AP's are on different bands, you can still compare what the signal would be if the node moved.
We'ee finally living in a pretty good time for open source wifi. A pity how only a couple chips have support (select MediaTek and Qualcomm) but wow things have gotten much better.
https://github.com/berlin-open-wireless-lab/DAWN
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Ask HN: Decent Internet Router Recommendations?
I'm a long term openwrt user, finally even set up DAWN[1] to orchestrate multiple APs (sometimes a win, sometimes worse than manually picking).
I really hate to say it, but even for the geeks, I'd generally recommend some kind of mesh product. A roommate installed a parallel Google mesh product & it worked so well, had such great coverage. Google spent hella time making this product good, thanks in part to Google Fiber. There's a great talk on their finding from Avery Penarunn back at the first netdevconf[2]. I'm sure many of the competing products are also very very capable. They have a level of reliable, just works intelligence, even over wifi mesh, that makes me envious.
There's sadly little new news in the OpenWRT space. There's some on-the-cusp work with some new Qualcomm chips that might start working in mere weeks or months. But we've been running the same wifi4 & wifi5 hardware for half a decade now, basically, with no real options. The Netgear X4S R7800 is still the go-to openwrt router. MediaTek has some wifi6 capable routers[3] targeted to the low end, which are nice & available & cheap, which is great, but decidedly low end.
[1] https://github.com/berlin-open-wireless-lab/DAWN
[2] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yZcHbD84j5Y
[3] https://openwrt.org/toh/views/toh_available_16128_ax-wifi
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Which WIFI access Point is the best?
For central controller management there is DAWN (https://github.com/berlin-open-wireless-lab/DAWN) but I have not used it yet so I can't tell you how well it works.
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Is there an open alternative to Ubiquiti UniFi?
A quick search brought up https://github.com/berlin-open-wireless-lab/DAWN on the first glance it looks more like hackers-hand-on than run-and-deploy :D
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Force 5Ghz capable clients into 5Ghz automatically?
AFAIK this is what DAWN is for: https://github.com/berlin-open-wireless-lab/DAWN
- Use multiple Pi 4s to allow roaming across APs (see comments)
radare2
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I'm pretty sure this is possible, and would appreciate confirmation/direction.
https://github.com/radareorg/radare2 (You can git clone it, then run the install script)
- Introducing YaRadare - YARA scanning for cloud-native apps (containers)
- Radare2 - UNIX-like reverse engineering framework and command-line toolset
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reverse engineering/de-compiling (with radare2/r2)
Has any one had an luck reverse engineering Pebble binaries? Whilst I've had success editing js code in existing applications I've not had any luck with C code. This is not an area I have a lot of experience but it looks like the disassembly support in radare2 might not be complete. I've opened a ticket https://github.com/radareorg/radare2/issues/20002 but thought it worth posting here to see what experiences people had.
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An lsblk like command for OpenBSD
Thanks this is helpful but I think this is just for programs integrated into the OpenBSD os. openbsd_lsblk is a standalone. I think their coding style is similar to the Linux Kernel coding style . but I contribute to project called radare2 (coding style) so I am used to programming their way (except for the space before () in functions that is quite annoying).
- rabin2 for scraping ELF to JSON
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That took a wild turn
True story: there is a project called Radare2 (or r2) which recently has been forked as Rizin. The reasons for the fork were many, but one of the things they changed was renaming occurrences in code of words like "anal", "sex", etc.
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[Task] Explain C source code
I need you to go through an open source project (https://github.com/radareorg/radare2). I need you to go through this file(https://github.com/radareorg/radare2/blob/master/libr/core/cmd_anal.c) and tell me what the code does. I am a bit rusty reading C source code, hence seeking help. Specifically, I need help understanding the following cases:
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Need help interpreting this C function.
Defined here: