On Sat, Aug 27, 2016 at 12:55 AM, Anish Mangal wrote:
> FWIW, on an older 2nd gen NUC I also see max 10-12 connections on the
> WiFi. I dont know if I have tried the latest kernel on that, so your
> finding is atleast consistent with older gen NUCs.
>
FYI Kernel 4.4.14 (Fedora 22's latest upon y
FWIW, on an older 2nd gen NUC I also see max 10-12 connections on the WiFi.
I dont know if I have tried the latest kernel on that, so your finding is
atleast consistent with older gen NUCs.
Beyond that number of users, one should anyway consider a router.
Off the shelf routers like 701nd support
Doesn't sound right.
What happened to stop the test?
Isn't the CentOS 7.2 kernel used in your test way older than the RPi3
kernel?
It would appear that CentOS 7.2 released with kernel 3.10 dated 30
June 2013, with minimal changes patched into it since. Perhaps it
needs another fix.
RPi3 kernel
Tim Moody & I tested maximum WiFi clients on the 5th and 6th generation i3
Intel NUC's, extensively confirming this with CentOS 7.2 in different
locations (to be 100% sure radio congestion was not causing this!)
We were very surprised (and a bit shocked!) that even the little RPi3,
which tested to