> Are the risks and tradeoffs well enough understood (and visible enough 
> for troubleshooting) to recommend broader deployment?
> 
> I recently gave openwrt a try on some hardware that I ultimately 
> concluded was insufficient for the job.  Fairly soon after changing out 
> my access point, I started getting complaints of Wi-Fi dropping in my 
> household, especially when someone was trying to videoconference.  I 
> discovered that my AP was spontaneously rebooting, and the box was 
> getting hot.

Most CPE devices these days rely on hardware accelerated packet forwarding to 
achieve their published specs.  That's all about taking packets in one side and 
pushing them out the other as quickly as possible, with only minimal support 
from the CPU (likely, new connections get a NAT/firewall lookup, that's all).  
It has the advantages of speed and power efficiency, but unfortunately it is 
also incompatible with our debloating efforts.  So debloated CPE will tend to 
run hotter and with lower peak throughput, which may be noticeable to cable and 
fibre users; VDSL (FTTC) users might have service of 80Mbps or less where this 
effect is less likely to matter.

It sounds like that AP had a very marginal thermal design which caused the 
hardware to overheat as soon as the CPU was under significant load, which it 
can easily be when a shaper and AQM are running on it at high throughput.  The 
cure is to use better designed hardware, though you could also contemplate 
breaking the case open to cure the thermal problem directly.  There are some 
known reliable models which could be collected into a list.  As a rule of 
thumb, the ones based on ARM cores are likely to be designed with CPU 
performance more in mind than those with MIPS.

Cake has some features which can be used to support explicit classification and 
(de)prioritisation of traffic via firewall marking rules, either by rewriting 
the Diffserv field or by associating metadata with packets within the network 
stack (fwmark).  This can be very useful for pushing Bittorrent or WinUpdate 
swarm traffic out of the way.  But for most situations, the default 
flow-isolating behaviour already works pretty well, especially for ensuring 
that one computer's network load has only a bounded effect on any other.  We 
can discuss that in more detail if that would be helpful.
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