Some background: I have a very long history with technology, including computer networking, that goes back over 20 years. I have a much-larger-than-typical home network that I designed and built and has served me very well for a LOT of years without issue.
A few years ago, I was having spotty issues throughout the house and opted to replace my WRT-54G as it simply wasn't up to the task of the sheer volume of devices that I have connected in the house. I installed an ASUS AC3100 and things were great.
Over the course of the last six months or so, performance and functionality has gotten much worse and I have recently noticed some odd behaviors that I'm looking for some assistance and guidance with since I'm basically stuck.
Current firmware is 3.0.0.4.384_32799
The configuration in place has been there mostly from the beginning and has endured through a half dozen or so firmware upgrades.
When I connected my MacBook Air yesterday, the IP and MAC address never showed up anywhere in the list of Clients. I have a second device in the house that I use purely as an AP (AC1700), and it didn't show up in the list of clients there, either. Clearly, both devices should have shown an entry as I was using the MacBook Air to access the admin GUI, but neither showed me. So, my first step in troubleshooting significant spikes in latency when pinging devices was unavailable to me as I had no way to know which device was actually providing me my WiFi signal (and even though the 1700 is MUCH further away, I have had lots of problems with devices connecting to IT instead of the 3100 which is much closer).
When I was connected to WiFi yesterday with my MacBook Air, pinging the 3100 had wild variations in latency from single digits to well over 500ms.
I do not use AIMesh. Given that I run a DHCP server on my network and use DNS services there, I don't know that I could actually even turn AIMesh on. Does anyone know the explicit requirements for this feature?
My DHCP server is a Linux host which also provides in-house DNS resolution for local domains and then forwards to my ISP's hosts for domains it is not authoritative for.
I do not use the standard IP Addressing scheme that the router uses with its factory configuration.
I do port-forward four different ports to three different hosts.
I have turned off all of the various Web History and QoS services.
The admin GUI pages seem to take "too long" to load (this is purely my own interpretation and not necessarily based on anything factual). While the pages on the 1700 aren't much quicker, they do seem to load more quickly.
I hesitate to revert the router to factory defaults and have to set it up all over again unless that's definitely what needs to be done. In other words, I'd like to avoid doing that unless there's a high likelihood or certainty that it will fix the issue - I don't want to do it just to troubleshoot because of the additional configuration I've had to do to it for my own needs.
Does anyone have some suggestions on where to start looking?
A few years ago, I was having spotty issues throughout the house and opted to replace my WRT-54G as it simply wasn't up to the task of the sheer volume of devices that I have connected in the house. I installed an ASUS AC3100 and things were great.
Over the course of the last six months or so, performance and functionality has gotten much worse and I have recently noticed some odd behaviors that I'm looking for some assistance and guidance with since I'm basically stuck.
Current firmware is 3.0.0.4.384_32799
The configuration in place has been there mostly from the beginning and has endured through a half dozen or so firmware upgrades.
When I connected my MacBook Air yesterday, the IP and MAC address never showed up anywhere in the list of Clients. I have a second device in the house that I use purely as an AP (AC1700), and it didn't show up in the list of clients there, either. Clearly, both devices should have shown an entry as I was using the MacBook Air to access the admin GUI, but neither showed me. So, my first step in troubleshooting significant spikes in latency when pinging devices was unavailable to me as I had no way to know which device was actually providing me my WiFi signal (and even though the 1700 is MUCH further away, I have had lots of problems with devices connecting to IT instead of the 3100 which is much closer).
When I was connected to WiFi yesterday with my MacBook Air, pinging the 3100 had wild variations in latency from single digits to well over 500ms.
I do not use AIMesh. Given that I run a DHCP server on my network and use DNS services there, I don't know that I could actually even turn AIMesh on. Does anyone know the explicit requirements for this feature?
My DHCP server is a Linux host which also provides in-house DNS resolution for local domains and then forwards to my ISP's hosts for domains it is not authoritative for.
I do not use the standard IP Addressing scheme that the router uses with its factory configuration.
I do port-forward four different ports to three different hosts.
I have turned off all of the various Web History and QoS services.
The admin GUI pages seem to take "too long" to load (this is purely my own interpretation and not necessarily based on anything factual). While the pages on the 1700 aren't much quicker, they do seem to load more quickly.
I hesitate to revert the router to factory defaults and have to set it up all over again unless that's definitely what needs to be done. In other words, I'd like to avoid doing that unless there's a high likelihood or certainty that it will fix the issue - I don't want to do it just to troubleshoot because of the additional configuration I've had to do to it for my own needs.
Does anyone have some suggestions on where to start looking?