Plugged a cat 5 cable into a Nanobridge M9 and the status lights started dancing all over. Tested the cable to find wires 3 &5 were crossed. (Yes, I did this out of order). Replaced the cable and was not able to connect to the m9. Can ping it. Was able to get into recovery mode and reinstall the software successfully. Still can't connect to it with the browser. LAN adapter shows an unidentified network. So did that +24v send the m9 to the junk pile or is it salvageable?
Jerry
w5mig
Jerry
w5mig
Which software did you re-install? AREDN or airOS?
if you can ping it, are you certain that you are pinging the LAN interface and not the WIFI (via another connected node)? (Actually, if you successfully used TFTP recovery mode, then, that proves that the ethernet port is ok).
If you haven't already, try closing your browser and re-opening it before attempting to connect via the gui.
Perhaps, try a different browser as well.
Good question.
1) after loading AREDN, ensure that you set your PC's network back to DHCP (from static)
2) try and use: http://localnode.local.mesh:8080 instead of an IP address. (ie. 10.x.x.x)
PC wireless adapter is disabled, lan adapter is set to 192.168.1.22, subnet mask to 255.255.255.0.
I am in recovery mode on M9. TFTP the file "aredn-3.16.1.0-ubnt-bullet-m-squashfs-factory.bin". Successful.
Power light solid green, connectivity light flashing green, top status light solid green. Lan adapter says "unidentified network". Change pc lan adapter to "obtain an ip address automatically". Lan adapter stills says "unidentified network". Open Chrome browser. Enter "http://localnode.local.mesh:8080" in address window. After several seconds get message "There is no internet connection".
Restart both M9 and laptop. All network conditions the same, lights on M9 the same. Open IE, enter "http://localnode.local.mesh:8080". Get "You're not connected to a network" message. Open Chrome, enter "http://localnode.local.mesh:8080". Get same "There is no internet connection".
So, is there something to learn here?
(Assuming a Windows laptop) open a command prompt on your PC and type: ipconfig
What is your IPv4 address show for your ethernet interface?
Do you have any software firewalls enabled on your PC? ala: Norton Internet Security, McAffee, etc?
--Dan Meyer / n0kfb
You do a tftp -i 192.168.1.20 put <filename> and you get back success?
What lights are currently illuminated on the nanobridge?
I would staticly assign 192.168.1.100 with a 255.255.255.0 mask to your LAN and see what you can ping/connect to. If you can get to 192.168.1.20 then the tftp update didn't take and you've got airOS on the node. If you can get to 192.168.1.1, then you may have AREDN installed. I don't know why the dhcp server isn't working. Try this and let us know. We may need a developer to jump in here soon, as I'm about out of ideas.
While the symptoms are odd and don't match what I would think I would see, the fact that voltage went up pins intended for data and the data wire was tied to a power pin means anything is posible from a hardware damage standpoint.
If someone wants to do a post mortem on this m9 I'll ship it.
Thanks for all the suggestions.
TFTP AirOs 5.5 back onto the device.
Can you connect to it via AirOS with a static IP? (ie. http://192.168.1.20)
My fellow team members will think this a real long shot, but before you tftp back to AirOS, grab your smart phone, look for and connect to SSID: Mesh. If such an SSID exists and you can connect, you'll be on the initial setup page. Scroll down the page and report how much Flash Memory is available.
Andre
The flash check is way beyond a long shot (likely being suggested since Andre recently tested some super extreamley alpha code on an unsupported device he was testing for the future and didn't get the results he would of hoped for but not in any way related to this but now everything is this same problem)
Andre
Was able to connect to SSID:MeshNode. Had to place the phone on the m9 to get a strong enough signal to connect. Attached is a screenshot of the page requested.
I notice it shows no LAN IP addresses which I believe it should (I haven't spent much time in preconfig mode lately) I suspect in the backend the chip probably "oopsed" out due to damage (you could navigate to the admin page and grab a support dump to further confirm this)
This does prove that the node is online but we're having some sort of network issue (which without proof to the contrary I'm going to suspect to be hardware related as most likely cause)
You do have this connected to an antenna, right?
I am holding out for some sort of firmware issue. I suggest loading third party firmware on the device (Open WRT, etc) and let us know what happens.
--Dan Meyer / n0kfb
I tried Daryl's suggestion of reinstalling airOS 5.5 but after a successful tftp (twice) the status 4 light would not come on. I will try again as I know I had done it previously. Then I will give Dan's advice a try with Open WRT.
Email me if you want to: k5dlq@aredn.org
- Darryl
It's unlikely that anything got fried by the crossed cable. Ethernet uses little transformers to DC isolate connected devices.
All that would happen is that the RX twisted pair will see a bias of 24VDC, but no current flow. The transformers at both devices won't pass any DC current.
However, the RX signals would be seriously degraded, but that shouldn't damage anything, SW or FW or HW.
Most of these transformers have centertaps that go to ground thru a capacitor, which also blocks DC current. The ethernet standard calls for 1.4KVDC isolation, just like in switching power supplies from powerline to its output. Idea being if a twisted ethernet pair somehow becomes hot with 120VAC, it won't start a fire or burn anything out. Maybe one could even have ethernet conectivity to some circuits on the hot side of a switching power supply or other power handling device and be safe, Though I'd probably would want the centertaps of the transformer windings on the RJ45 side be directly connected to the green grounding wire of the equipment power cord to ground to be sure of safety.
Hi Gerald, (et al)
I did receive your M900 the other day. I had some time today to look at it.
Good news and bad news:
The good news is that I was able to get it working.
The bad news is that it appears that the ethernet port was damaged slightly. I say it is crippled, but, functional.
To connect your PC to the node, YOU MUST set your network adapter to force 10MB rate. (not auto, not 100MB).
If you do that, you will get an IP address and can communicate with it normally over ethernet. Mesh wifi is unaffected and is working 100%.
- Darryl
Thanks for receiving the unit and identifying the issue. At least now I know it is useable. Will also look into getting an RMA as you discovered this has been an issue with other units.
73,
Jerry
w5mig