![]() ![]() It's all in one line there in the HTML I split it into lines for readability.Įdit: pass2 is the id of the password field (although its "name" attribute is set to "passwd1"). I was quite confused when I set up lastpass to remember the password and it wouldn't work until I discovered the number of asterisks in the field were different from the number of characters in the password when I typed it manually, decided to debug, and discovered it.Īnd I mean it's the value of the onkeyup attribute of the element. (Of course the firmware didn't help, and we ended up switching back to the old router this one had replaced, which has working port forwarding but randomly disconnects from the DSL all the time.)įrontier (an ISP) routers have this bit of Javascript in the onkeyup of the password field in the login page: (Link because it's huge). ![]() Click OK to cancel, or Cancel to continue." Here is the dialog that it presented me: "This will update your router's firmware. And this is the culmination, the "Representative Dialog Box" of the router's config site, and a monument to my ISP's sins. Time to try a firmware update, since this thing has major issues anyway. I eventually concluded that port forwarding is totally broken, and cannot be configured. Because of the "If it doesn't work then keep trying and eventually the stars will align and it'll work" philosophy that was painfully beat into my brain last year by Apple's Xcode IDE, I tried several more times. Thinking my Minecraft-deprived brain had given me the tremors and caused me to click the wrong button, I reconfigured it.and there were still no rules configured. I looked at the page and saw there were no port forwarding rules configured. I texted my friend, he tried to join, and couldn't. It took about 20 seconds, but it completed without (visible) error. I typed in the IP of my server and the port number, and clicked "Accept". I navigated through the menus, counting "One-one-thousand, Two-one-thousand" with each click, and found the port forwarding configuration page. And I quickly discovered that if you click any button or link within 2 seconds of the page load, you get a 500 Internal Server Error. The third time I must have paused because it worked. I logged into its web configuration page and got a 500 Internal Server Error. It's a combination DSL modem/router/WAP provided by our ISP (who is a major WTF themselves, I suppose TRWTF is monopolies because we literally can't switch provider). Along the way I discovered a WTF-infested router that, given the supplier, really shouldn't have suprised me. Last night, I was attempting to set up a Minecraft server and configure port forwarding on our router so some friends could join. ![]()
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