5/7/2023 0 Comments Medialink wapr300n![]() ![]() This issue is rated as High because it is a local permanent denial of service (device interoperability: completely permanent or requiring re-flashing the entire operating system). References: N-CVE-2016-8469.Īn elevation of privilege vulnerability in the bootloader could enable a local attacker to execute arbitrary modem commands on the device. This issue is rated as Moderate because it first requires compromising a privileged process. ![]() The Benchmark Summary below shows the average of throughput measurements made in all test locations.An information disclosure vulnerability in the camera driver could enable a local malicious application to access data outside of its permission levels. The 0° position had the front of the router facing the chamber antennas. The closest surface of the router was positioned 8″ from the chamber antennas in all test positions. The router was first reset to factory defaults, then set to Channel 6 and 20 MHz B/W mode. The 40 MHz coexistence test failed, with the E900 continuing to use a 40 MHz wide channel even when the router’s upper channel was set to 9.Īll wireless performanc tests were run using our standard wireless test process and 1.0.04 version firmware loaded. But it did not restore to 40 MHz bandwidth when bit was cleared. The router immediately fell back to 20 MHz when the Fat Channel intolerant bit was set. The 40 MHz Coexistence and Fat channel intolerant tests yielded mixed results. The WPS session completed successfully in a WPA2/AES connection. WPS is enabled by default and produced a PIN session prompt when I associated a Win 7 client. The router defaults to a unique SSID based on the router’s serial number. It defaulted to Auto channel mode and Auto (20 / 40 MHz) Channel bandwidth mode upon power-up. ![]() If you do opt for an E1200, the parental controls (below) are very basic and don’t include specific service blocking. The Cisco logo is still there, as is instructions for installing Cisco Connect (don’t bother).Īs noted earlier, the main difference between the E900 and E1200 is that the E1200 supports wireless guest network access and simple parental controls. WMM (Wireless MultiMedia) (enabled by default)Īfter plugging in the router and launching a browser, you’re reminded of the E900’s heritage in the capture page you are redirected to.Uplink (LAN to WAN) only QoS with High, Medium, Normal or Low Priority that can be applied to specific applications (divided into Application, Online Game and Voice Device groups), physical switch ports or specific MAC addresses.Incoming, outgoing, Security and DHCP onscreen log access with support for Linksys Logviewer recording.HTTPS admin access, remote management (HTTP / HTTPS) enable with IP range restriction and port setting.Single port forwarding and Port Range forwarding and triggered ports.IPsec, PPTP and L2TP VPN passthrough (enabled by default).SPI firewall disable, multicast, WAN ping and IDENT filtering and Proxy, Java, ActiveX and Cooking blocking.Built-in Dynamic DNS clients for TZO and DynDNS.DHCP server with MAC address reservation.DHCP, Static, PPPoE, PPTP, L2TP, Telstra Cable WAN types.Supported are IPv6-Auto mode internet connection, 6rd tunnel and IPv6 firewall rules. The E900 supports the older standard Linksys router feature set, slightly enhanced to support IPv6. The callouts for the ports, indicators and buttons are shown below. The top of the router is clean and has no indicators to light you your bedroom at night. The single WAN and four switched LAN ports shown in the photo below are all 10/100 and there is no USB port for drive or printer sharing. The E900 has the design aesthetic of the rest of Linksys’ E series routers being designed to sit flat on a desk or shelf and without mounting slots on the bottom for wall-hanging. We’ll come back to that when I look at the innards. It will also cover the E1200 v2, since as you’ll see shortly, it’s essentially the same as the E900.Īccording to Wikidevi, the E900 also uses same raw board as a Linksys E800. So this review will mainly focus on the performance test results. We’ve actually seen this guy before as the Linksys E1200. This time I’m taking a quick look at Linksys’ current entry-level N router, the E900. ![]() In a nod toward what most people still are buying these days, we’re testing a few popular N300 and N600 class routers to flesh out the Charts, Finders and Rankers a bit more. ![]()
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