We may be straying off topic, but it seems to me there are three things at work here. One is that all these devices are built on openwrt, which is in active development. The second is that some of these devices are running on proprietary drivers, like the Mango and Beryl, that only GL-iNet has access to. The opensource drivers may or may not be as satisfactory in combo with openwrt. The third is GL-iNet’s own proprietary interface.
If a device was working with opensource drivers, I would be less concerned about EOL; the worst that would happen is you devolve into openwrt without the GL-iNet interface. With proprietary drivers, EOL is a bigger thing, since some security fixes and improvements might only be possible in the proprietary driver, so GL-INet is your only source.
So I would start not with EOL but with whether there are opensource drivers for the chipset. I have three Asus routers that have been EOL for years but are still current with most security fixes through community support in the places where there aren’t closed source Broadcom blobs.
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