Hi All,

Summarising, for future reference...

I received some six responses. Overall the feedback was a little
disappointing. Three responses suggested that it would be easier/less
time consuming/more stable to simply connect a consumer access point
device via Ethernet. Of course, I wouldn't learn as much by doing this
:-(. The background to this seems to be mostly issues with the
configuration and stability of drivers e.g. ath and ral.

At least a couple of the respondents are successfully using ALIX boards,
including the desired 2D13. None of the responses related to the
specific wireless devices that I asked about. Some of those mentioned as
having been used included the AR5212 and AR5413 (with ath) and the
RT2561C (ral).

A couple of responses indicated that OpenBSD doesn't support 802.11n. I
got my initial information from the athn manual page. It begins:
> ...
> NAME
>     athn - Atheros IEEE 802.11a/g/n wireless network device
> ...
>     The athn driver provides support for a wide variety of
>     Atheros 802.11n devices ...

Which I incorrectly took to mean that "n" networking was supported...

However, further down in the same man page, under caveats, it states:
> ...
>     The athn driver does not support any of the 802.11n capabilities
>     offered by the adapters.  Additional work is required in
>     ieee80211(9) before those features can be supported.
> ...

That should teach me (yet again) to read the whole man page :-)

Cato Auestad provided a very helpful link to a description of his
working (ral based) OpenBSD configuration:
    http://bleakgadfly.com/notes/openbsd_wifi.html

There he mentions that support from the hostap daemon - hostapd(8) - is
also necessary for such a configuration. Something else that I hadn't
realised.

So, based on the feedback, it looks like while this might be a fun
project, it could be hard to create a stable "production" access point.
Thanks for all the info.

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