I just got a Ruckus here in the US. You can just not use any of the cloud crap 
on it. Has PoE which made mounting it on the ceiling trivial. The OpenBSD 
router stays a router, and I have so many ssid options + vlans. It’s kinda 
crazy. 

Sean

Typed with my thumb.

> On Jan 1, 2020, at 12:39, Zé Loff <zel...@zeloff.org> wrote:
> 
> 
>> On Wed, Jan 01, 2020 at 08:54:46AM -0700, List wrote:
>> Hi *, 
>> I am currently building a home router based upon OpenBSD. 
>> I therefore need some kind of WIFI Hardware. This piece of hardware
>> needs to be connected over usb. 
>> Do you have any suggestions or recommendations ? As far as I can see
>> it's pretty hard  to find an antenna which is connected  via USB an runs
>> on a supported chipset. It is  easy to get your hands on a
>> realtek-chipset driven device. But urtw(4) doesn't support  Host AP
>> mode. Only ones that do are: athn(4),  ral(4), ath(4). 
>> Finding those is hard. 
>> 
>> Maybe you guys know things I couldn't find ? 
>> 
>> g, 
>> Stephan
>> 
> 
> In all honesty, and I've tried what you are aiming for a couple of times
> in the past, it's just easier to get a dedicated AP (or a cheap wifi
> router with a cable on the ethernet switch, which is usually bridged
> with the wifi interface) and connect to an OpenBSD router which will
> do all the necessary packet filtering (including keeping the AP/router's
> firmware from reaching the internet, if needed be).  IMHO this will be
> stabler and faster than trying to find an adequate wifi board.  And
> these days you're bound to get nice perks like multiple SSIDs and
> 802.11ac speeds (or whatever the latest 802.11* protocol is), which
> AFAIK aren't available on OpenBSD yet.  Also, note that (if I am not
> mistaken) ural(4) are the only USB Wi-Fi interfaces that can handle Host
> AP mode, and they only do 802.11b/g which is kind of slow by today's
> standards.
> 
> -- 
>  

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