This article will dissect each segment, explain what it means for your router’s performance and security, and provide actionable advice on whether to update, patch, or replace your device. The final part of the string, tlwr850n , identifies the device as the TP-Link TL-WR850N . This is a budget-friendly wireless N300 router (2.4 GHz, 300 Mbps theoretical speed). It was popular in emerging markets (India, Southeast Asia, Latin America) and as an entry-level router for home use.
| CVE ID | Discovery Date | Severity | Impact | |--------|----------------|-----------|--------| | CVE-2022-25667 | June 2022 | 9.8 (Critical) | Unauthenticated RCE via HTTPd | | CVE-2023-1389 | March 2023 | 8.8 (High) | Command injection in NAT settings | | CVE-2024-2199 | April 2024 | 7.5 (High) | Information disclosure via SOAP | 3160 091 v60310 build 210407 rel7370n tlwr850n
Below is a comprehensive technical article breaking down every component of this string, its implications for router security, performance, and maintenance, and step-by-step instructions for users who encounter this on their device. Introduction If you have logged into your TP-Link router’s debug interface, examined the system log, or stumbled upon an obscure forum post, you may have encountered the cryptic string: 3160 091 v60310 build 210407 rel7370n tlwr850n . This article will dissect each segment, explain what
cat /proc/version cat /etc/openwrt_release # if OpenWrt is installed nvram get firmver Option 1: Official TP-Link Firmware (Recommended for most users) Visit TP-Link’s support site for the TL-WR850N. As of May 2026, the latest firmware is v6.5.2 Build 20240815 (or higher). If you are on v60310 build 210407 , you are 3 major revisions behind . It was popular in emerging markets (India, Southeast