A rather useless/unambitious response. It is obvious that IF this is normal behaviour, it is a rather poor device.
It is basically impossible for me to move around in the house while using a device. As soon as I loose the connection there is this delay for several minutes. Even if trying to disconnect/connect manually I get the same issue, so I don't but the ASUS explanation.
Also when turning on previously sleeping devices in different rooms I seem to get the same behaviour (but it could be that they keep the connection in some way I don't understand).
Luckily I seldom move around that much while using the device, or in much of a hurry at home so I will live with it for now.
I wouldn't recommend the device to anyone though, until ASUS recognises the issue and fixes the firmware. MAYBE it works better in other modes than AP, but wouldn't take my chances.
Hej SwedeMike,
I was about to accept the fact that the behaviour is 'by design' and get some other AP's.
Did a final test which does not match with the Asus explanation.
Reopened the case.
Background of my test:
My interpretation of the answer of the R&D department:
- If a client roams to another AP the old AP will keep trying to keep the connection open before removing it from its association list
- The new AP (in this case also and RP-AC56) will not handle traffic for the newly connected client since it is aware that the old AP still keeps the option open that has temporarily lost the connection
This seems like a perfectly logical explanation (but not the best solution for an AP)
Not 100% sure but according tho the log the AP's are indeed aware of their coexistence
snippet from the RP log:
Feb 14 16:12:01 kernel: ACT - SendBSS2040CoexistMgmtAction(BSSCoexist2040=0x4)
to get a better roaming experience I tried the following:
- In the WiFi Professional settings I enabled Roaming assistance and measured wifi signal strength throughout the house to find 'break even point
- On the client side (Intel NIC) I configured the driver options to:
Roaming Agressiveness - 1. Lowest
If I understand it correctly this would mean that:
- the AP would take the 'lead' in ending the association
- Client would look for strongest signal and reconnect to that one that's strongest
Since in this case the first AP would already be disassociated a normal connection would be established with the new 2nd AP.
Unfortunately this didn't happen either.
Tried different Roaming Assistance settings (up to -40db) but the behaviour is still the same.
This is maybe a separate issue that I hope you can confirm or provide pointers where I'm going wrong.
I could imagine that the 5 mins. disconnect problem could also easily be solved by using the following algorithm (feature request).
1. Client connects to new AP (roaming)
2. New AP sends update to the 'old' AP that a client connected
3. Old client sees that it's still in it's association list and removes it.
Will keep everyone posted on the response.