The LEDE Project (“Linux Embedded Development Environment”) is a Linux operating system emerged from the OpenWrt project. It is a complete replacement for the vendor-supplied firmware of a wide range of wireless routers and non-network devices. See the Table of Hardware for supported devices. For more information about LEDE Project organization, see the About LEDE pages.

LEDE 17.01.4 “Reboot” incorporates a fair number of fixes back ported from the development branch during the last two weeks.

While the LEDE 17.01.4 release includes fixes for the KRACK bugs in the WPA Protocol disclosed earlier this week in the router firmware, these fixes do not fix the problem on the client-side. You still need to update all your client devices - computers, phones, tablets, cameras, refrigerators, thermostats, light bulbs, and any other device using Wi-Fi. Since some client devices might never receive an update, hostapd contains an optional AP-side workaround to complicate these attacks, slowing them down. Please note that this does not fully protect you from them, especially when running older versions of wpa_supplicant vulnerable to CVE-2017-13086, which the workaround does not address. As this workaround can cause interoperability issues and reduced robustness of key negotiation, this workaround is disabled by default.

Due to the version bump of toolchain/gdb to 8.0.1, at least GCC 4.8 is now required to build LEDE.

For a detailed list of changes since 17.01.3 refer to https://lede-project.org/releases/17.01/changelog-17.01.4

As always, a big thank you goes to all our active package maintainers, testers, documenters, and supporters.

Have fun!

The LEDE Community