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"PARDEN" the interruption! October's Meshoween network test was so successful that, we've decided to celebrate with another one at the end of the year. We'll celebrate New Nodes Eve and then Happy Mesh Year!
Seriously, this is an opportunity to stress the network again after the router storm mitigation patch has time to promulgate throughout the network. Meshoween also revealed an issue with the performance of the Mesh Status page when the node count got high. Both these patches were published in nightly builds in early November. If your node's running a nightly build later than that, you should be good to go.
The WWL - "World Wide Linkup" will start at 000Z on 1/1/2022 (afternoon of the 31st for the U.S.) and last at least 4 hours. If you've brought up a tunnel that you don't normally use, feel free to drop it anytime after 4 hours.
So crank up those tunnels and be on the lookout for network wierdnesses.
We are considering how the future version of AREDN mesh network software might affect the use of the Meshchat application.
Please help us by responding to the Meshchat poll here.
Note - this report is written from a Southern California perspective. Depending on your location, as they say YMMV!
During the test the node count on the linked networks locally rose to around 1,090. N2MH's N2MH-Hub saw 1428, most likely a record for an AREDN network.
Observations:
As we hoped, network storms never appeared from our West Coast point of view, and none have been reported to date. Network traffic was not substantially higher than normal. Using KN6PLV's Mesh Monitor, messages per second were averaging about 600 before the test. During the test it hovered closer to 700. Most of the increase in traffic was due to OLSR routing broadcasts, which each node has to handle.
As we expected, older devices struggled. Many wound up with a load significantly greater than 1 (which is a full load for a single-CPU device like these), indicating their CPUs were struggling to keep up with their pending processes. Ssh'ing into a few of them and running top showed that with node counts around 1,000, loads of around 4-5 were seen.
Things we didn't expect:
While the slower nodes struggled with displaying UI pages, they were usually still able to pass traffic. But occasionally that older hardware bogged down so much that it couldn't. Perhaps some effort should be made to prioritize traffic handling...
We've wrapped up the Meshoween network abuse test :-).
If you participated and have any specific observations, please pass them along to me (orv.beach@gmail.com) and they'll be rolled them into the report on the test.
tl;dr - it went pretty well - a few surprises.
It is now easier than ever to read and save the AREDN documentation you need.
To find it, go to the blue main menu bar on the AREDNmesh home page and hover your cursor over the third item DOCS.
When the dropdown menu appears, move your cursor over the first item -- ONLINE DOCS -- and click it using the left mouse button.
A new page will appear [https://arednmesh.readthedocs.io/en/latest/] with the latest set of published documents.
At the bottom left of the page, at the bottom of the Table of Contents column, you will see Read the Docs v:latest ⯆
The v:latest ⯆ indicates that you are viewing the latest version of the documents and the ⯆ ...
The ham radio presentations from the SCALE 17X conference are now available on YouTube.
The presentations are:
1. Orv Beach, W6BI will detail that growth with emphasis on Southern California, with metrics, maps and graphs. He'll also cover some of the more significant network events, including the ability to stream video of recent brush fires from networked mountaintop webcams to YouTube.
2. Paul Wilkinson, K6IG talks about “Raspberry Pi + HAM Radio = Inexpensive repeater system”. With little effort a very powerful HAM repeater can be made with a Raspberry Pi, two HAM radios, and an internet connection. Some additional, yet inexpensive, hardware is required.
3. Ben Kuo, AI6YR presents “Linux, Raspberry PI, RTLSDR, LAME, and Open Source: A Recipe For Responding To Natural Disasters”. He covers both the why's and how's of putting together your own Raspberry Pi-based, open source system to help your own local community tap into the power of the crowdsourcing and social media emergency management.
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