ampr-ripd package for OpenWrt 24.10

I have some exciting news to share. The ampr-ripd package that I put together for OpenWrt is now part of the 24.10 release. So if you’re running 24.10.x:

opkg update
opkg install ampr-ripd

will install it.

/etc/init.d/ampr-ripd configure will provide some help on how to configure it to use your Net 44 subnet and assign a host address.

This will make Net 44 quite accessible to OpenWrt users without a high learning curve.

Feel free to give it a whirl and spread the word.

Thanks to Marius YO2LOJ for accomodating a request for some minor changes to ampr-ripd to satisfy the OpenWrt package reviewers.

For information on how a licensed radio amateur can make use of Net 44 addressing see this link.

Net 44 and Icom Terminal Mode

Since before the days of the commercial internet, amateur radio operators have had their own Class A block of IPv4 addresses. Net 44 or AMPRNet is a non-routeable amateur radio experimentation network and access is only available to licensed radio amateurs around the world.

While hams have been experimenting with Net 44 since the early days of packet radio, interconnecting RF and wired networks via AX.25, I’m a relative newcomer. A couple members of the 020 Team are up and running on the AMPRNet and looking at potential use cases.

My driving use case is the to get around the limitation of one ircddbgateway behind a single network address translation (NAT). This limitation prevented me from running an ircddbgateway to service my Pi-Star hotspots and to use Icom Terminal Mode on my IC-9700 at the same time. What is the limitation? UDP port 40000, used by the ircddb protocol, must be forwarded to the destination system. As the Highlander said, “There can be only one.”

By establishing a Net 44 subnet behind my firewall and assigning a Net 44 address to the Icom, I get around the single IP NAT limitation. There’s a bit more to this, but a Net 44 gateway can be run on a spare Raspberry Pi or your internet gateway router (or any Linux based host). This article is not, however, meant to be an implementation guide but more of a starting point for thought.

It is also an announcement that XLX020 is now available on the AMPRNet for use by those with Icom Terminal Mode radios. Our gateway address on the AMPRNet is 44.64.12.57 and you can connect to any module using a To Call of /XLX020m (replace m with your module of choice). If you’re on Net 44, feel free to connect.

73 de K2IE