Old TL-MR3420 v2 traffic stats

This thread has been locked for further replies. You can start a new thread to share your ideas or ask questions.

Old TL-MR3420 v2 traffic stats

This thread has been locked for further replies. You can start a new thread to share your ideas or ask questions.
Old TL-MR3420 v2 traffic stats
Old TL-MR3420 v2 traffic stats
2020-07-08 19:26:56 - last edited 2020-07-09 01:26:11
Model: TL-MR3420  
Hardware Version: V2
Firmware Version: 3.16.9 Build 150319 Rel.60489n

Hi,

 

I have an old router which I am using to connect via 4G and works fine (once I have managed to find a compatible dongle). The point is that I would like to integrate it into a monitoring system and I would like to being able to regularly extract traffic stats (and maybe other info).

 

I can see that SSHv2 port is open but not allowing me in or letting me execute any known command. Probably it is bound to a remote control API which is being used by the mobile APP. 

 

Is it somewhere documented how to interact with the router via this SSH or WEB so that stats info may be captured by the monitoring system?

 

Thanks in advance.

 

J.

  0      
  0      
#1
Options
2 Reply
Re:Old TL-MR3420 v2 traffic stats
2020-07-10 04:27:47

@jacobop008 

Hello,

 

This model didn't support the monitoring system.

 

If you want to monitor the Traffic Statistics, you can access the web interface of the router, then go to Advanced-->System Tools-->Traffic Monitor to check it.

 

Here is a FAQ you can refer to access the web interface of the router: 

https://www.tp-link.com/en/support/faq/2838/

 

Hope it can work and have a nice day!

  0  
  0  
#2
Options
Re:Old TL-MR3420 v2 traffic stats
2020-07-13 22:04:00

Hi, 

 

thanks for your reply. I knew that already ... the point is how to automate that login so that status data can be captured by an external monitoring system, rather than a human being looking at the browser.

 

It would be enought if  there is any way I can inject username/passwd inline with the  curl/wget call to the "http://192.168.0.1/" of the router and get the HTML response to parse afterwards  it and extract bytes in/out reckon. 

 

Regards.

  0  
  0  
#3
Options

Information

Helpful: 0

Views: 418

Replies: 2