/*********************************************************** Although snapshots do not really belong to "release builds", it is currently needed to have the snapshots page in this hierarchy, because it is used this way in the ToP (Table of packages, /packages/start). --- tmomas 2017/02/22 18:53 ************************************************************/
/*********************************************************** The first section of this page shall contain only the following two WRAP-boxes. Rationale: The two boxes can be included in other wiki pages via therefore the first section must remain compact and contain only the key messages. ************************************************************/
The development branch can contain experimental code that is under active development and should not be used for production environments. Snapshot images may support additional hardware; however, it is experimental, considered unstable, and sometimes won't compile.
Prebuilt snapshot images do not come with any web interface or GUI. You will need to be comfortable using a command line and remote shell to install one yourself -> See How to install LuCI and Use SSH to connect to the internet and install Luci Web interface
| Who | What | Build frequency | Expected availability | Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase 1 images buildbot | kmods | daily | 3 months after build | https://downloads.openwrt.org/snapshots/targets/x86/64/kmods/ |
| Phase 1 images buildbot | target specific packages [1] | daily | until next build [2] | https://downloads.openwrt.org/snapshots/targets/x86/64/packages/ |
| Phase 2 packages buildbot | normal packages | daily | no specific expiry date | https://downloads.openwrt.org/snapshots/packages/x86_64/ |
* you absolutely need a GUI and you are not capable of installing LuCI yourself via ssh/commandline
* you are completely unexperienced with linux and do not know what ssh is. It will most probably be a hassle for you and all other people involved to pull you through the installation and back to stock firmware.
* you think you always need at any time to have the latest bleeding edge software, just because. The problems that can arise (starting by non-availability of LuCI in precompiled snapshot images) might be overwhelming to you and might drive you back to installing stock firmware again.
* your expectation is to have a flawless and 100% working compilation, installation and usage of the firmware. Snapshots are experimental, and weird issues of any kind can arise at any time. What does work today, doesn’t necessarily work tomorrow.
* your are experienced with linux and know how to manage unexpected problems of any kind (not booting at all, bootloops, no network connectivity, ...)
* there is no other choice, i.e. there is no other stable release available. This may be the case for newly added devices, or devices whose support hasn’t matured enough to be called stable.
* stable release suffers from poor performance, and if snapshot is explicitly recommended in the forum due to improved stability, better wifi, or $whatever_problem it solves.
* you can live without a GUI, or if you are experienced enough to install LuCI yourself