The ar71xx-tiny target sets CONFIG_CLEAN_IPKG, which would delete opkg
control files required for user creation. Fix image generation and the user
creation script.
Fixes#1012
ath10k has to switch the regulatory domain when switching the default
country when ATH_USER_REGD is enabled. This is for example important when
switching from country US (FCC) to DE (ETSI). The ath implementation will
use ath_reg_dyn_country_user_allow to check if this is allowed.
Unfortunately, this function always seems to return false to
ath_reg_notifier_apply even when ATH_USER_REGD is enabled. But it must
actually always accept the requests from the user (when ATH_USER_REGD is
enabled) to correctly set the conformance test limits in the ath10k binary
blob.
Not doing it will sometimes allow too high transmit powers on edge channels
for correctly calibrated devices outside their default regulatory domain.
Signed-off-by: Sven Eckelmann <sven.eckelmann@open-mesh.com>
The default abbreviation length depends on factors like user configuration,
git version and number of repository objects. Use unabbreviates IDs to make
patch generation more reproducible.
The batadv debugfs requires large memory blocks to write the text debug
tables. This is inefficient for large tables like the global translation
table or the originators table.
The memory requirement can be reduced by using netlink. It copies smaller
packets in a binary format to the userspace program. The respondd module of
gluon-mesh-batman-adv-core can therefore parse larger originator tables
without causing an OOM on systems which are tight on memory.
Signed-off-by: Sven Eckelmann <sven@narfation.org>
The batadv debugfs requires large memory blocks to write the text debug
tables. This is inefficient for large tables like the global translation
table or the originators table.
The memory requirement can be reduced by using netlink. It copies smaller
packets in a binary format to the userspace program. gluon-status-page-api
can therefore parse larger originator tables without causing an OOM on
systems which are tight on memory.
Signed-off-by: Sven Eckelmann <sven@narfation.org>