3160 091 V60310 Build 210407 Rel7370n | Tlwr850n ^new^

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 .

| 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 . cat /proc/version cat /etc/openwrt_release # if OpenWrt is

If your router displays this exact string, update immediately . The 2021 build is insecure by 2026 standards. If no official update is available for your hardware revision, replace the router with a modern Wi-Fi 5 or Wi-Fi 6 device (e.g., TP-Link Archer C6 or AX10). The TL-WR850N had a good run, but rel7370n belongs in a museum — not on your network. Have you encountered a similar cryptic firmware string on another TP-Link or MediaTek device? Share the exact log line in the comments for decoding. | CVE ID | Discovery Date | Severity