Do not depend on the respondd-airtime module just to get the configured
channels. This removes the display of the frequency in addition to the
channel, as it is not readily available.
In addition, the translation string is improved to allow for text after
the channel number.
(cherry picked from commit 0d3fa6b59b)
This code is usually running on an embedded CPU without FPU. In
addtition to its inefficience, the algorithm is also much harder to
understand.
Replace the logarithm formula with a simple loop.
(cherry picked from commit f2e0f7e3a8)
This adds the wireless client count for 2.4GHz and 5 GHz radios to the
status page. Previously, only the total client count advertised by
the mesh protocol was visible.
This reverts commits
- caf2dd037b.
- 07ebac6a49
- 55eff45f96
I accidentally pushed these commits as I had them lying around on a
dirty checkout I did testing on.
A downside of this behaviour is that the page does not work for IPv4-only
clients, as the redirect will always point at an IPv6 address.
Still, it seems like a good idea to enforce the redirect even from the IPv4
next-node address, as switching nodes while being connected to the status
page would lead to unexpected behaviour.
All Access-Control-Allow-Origin are removed to improve users' privacy. As
the status page API is thus not useful without the status page anymore,
merge them back into a single package.
The status-page-api respondd provider is removed as well.
Fixes#1194
This new status page is significantly smaller than the old one. It always
loads its resources from the same host as the page itself, not requiring
cross-origin requests anymore.
It also uses the common i18n infrastructure of gluon-web.
Fixes#914
Apart from replacing a patch for the former by two patches for latter,
this involved minimal adaptations of the lua scripts in the following
packages:
* gluon-announce
* gluon-announced
* gluon-mesh-batman-adv-core
* gluon-status-page
This will introduce a new nodeinfo object, network.mesh.bat0.interfaces,
containing any of the the following subordinated objects:
- wireless
- tunnel
- other
Each of these objects contains a (possibly empty) list of MAC addresses
(lowercase, colon-notation) corresponding to a interface of the given
class. Combined with a batman graph it is thus possible to mark
sub-graphs as "wireless" or "vpn".
The previously used object mesh_intefaces is superseded by this new
object structure and mesh_interfaces will be removed in a future Gluon
release.