I found that I had to power cycle my modem. Then this problem was instantly fixed."The Internet Service Provider's DHCP service is not working properly" a constant error when updating to 386.4, restarting the device does not help. When returning to 386.3.2, everything works like an atomic clock, there are no errors. Authorization of the IPoE provider's e at the MAC address. Maybe someone has encountered help.
Not really. The only thing I can think of is perhaps some nvram being used up unnecessarily by old obsolete variables.So am I missing anything when I keep doing a dirty install?
I say hardware is because 2.4 has been known to fail on this router made in China 2018 which mine is.Yes, you may be.
There is only one way to find out (for your hardware).
Fully Reset Router and Network
[Wireless] ASUS router Hard Factory Reset | Official Support | ASUS Global
Fully Reset / Best Practice Setup / More
Not really. The only thing I can think of is perhaps some nvram being used up unnecessarily by old obsolete variables.
NVRAM usage is shown on the Tools - System Information page. It's not really a problem for the RT-AC86U, it's more of an issue on the older models.
NVRAM usage is shown on the Tools - System Information page. It's not really a problem for the RT-AC86U, it's more of an issue on the older models.
Looks OK.
Yep same thing happened with asus vanilla upgrade for XT8 mesh nodes. The firmware kills TPLINK stuff for some reason.... Sad that both my merlin and non-merlin asus stuff can not be updated with the poor performance for TPLINKI'm also seeing the 2.4GHz issues reported by others (particularly @ElmerFudd) with TP-Link bulbs and switches going offline or slow to respond after upgrading to 386.4 on my AX88U where these problems did not previously exist.
The only workaround I have found to work, apart from reverting to a previous firmware, is to set Wireless Mode to Legacy; all the TP-Link devices are able to stay connected and respond snappily.
But, this setting can slow down non-IoT devices connected to 2.4GHz. For example, my mid-2010 Mac mini slows down to around 5 Mbps where it used to test above 35 Mbps on 2.4GHz.
Until this gets resolved (hopefully with updated Asus wireless code?), I've currently disabled 2.4GHz on my AX88U and have set up my GL.iNet Beryl as an access point serving 2.4GHz using the same SSID.
All TP-Link devices and the Mac mini run beautifully and as expected, but clearly, this can't be the final solution.
I've had no issues with my smart devices, a mix of TP-Link Kasa and Mirabella Genio, all of which connect through guest network 2 on the 2.4GHz band. Like @CLK, Wireless Mode is set to 'legacy', and both airtime fairness and universal beamforming are 'off' - speed is not an issue as the 2.4GHz band only services the smart devices plus one aging phone and a kindle; priority is stability.Can anyone confirm if tplink kasa home devices still function correctly. They got murdered on the latest XT8 firmware and required a revert.
You could upload the entire syslog to pastebin.com and provide a link to it.
I'll take a look and see this weekend after I re-try the upgrade. I've got about 35+ TP-Link Kasa devices, 20+ Google Home devices, 7 HD Nest Cams and other Nest gear with most on the 2.4GHz bands. Overall about 110 active devices with the rest of the devices on the 5GHz bands or hardwired. One change at a time...For what it's worth, I've got 3 Sylvania smart bulbs, a Brother HL-L2350 printer, a Eufy Robovac, and a Subaru Crosstrek that connect to my 2.4Ghz. All connections are working perfectly. Settings attached.
Thanks. Unfortunately there's nothing obvious to me (maybe others can see something) as to the cause. But I suggest that you turn off the logging of dropped packets as it's serving no useful purpose and is just filling up the log making diagnostics more difficult.Asus Crash 1/5/22 386.4 - Pastebin.com
Pastebin.com is the number one paste tool since 2002. Pastebin is a website where you can store text online for a set period of time.pastebin.com
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