Or it is unrelated to your router, and it is an ISP issue.either it was an insane coincidence and my hardware failed, or something "deep" in the unit is horrendously confused.
Or it is unrelated to your router, and it is an ISP issue.
Is it possible your ISP is doing something to the packets on their modem that isn't present on the Asus router?Maybe, but it's kinda weird that this all goes away if I connect my modem directly to my PC
Can you confirm that the "Resolve Hostname" and "Ping Target" fields are only meant to contain a single entry. If so, perhaps they should not accept input that contains spaces. Same for the Dual WAN page.
Is it possible your ISP is doing something to the packets on their modem that isn't present on the Asus router?
Generally Packet loss is 100% from the ISP side as merlin stated.
1 days 11 hour(s) 0 minute(s) 28 seconds
Seems to me ASUS just need to remove all TM crap and their EULA.However it seems like something ASUS needs to work with TM
Maybe. There are so many input fields on the webui as a whole that I generally don't really devote time to making sure they are all doing proper input validation, as this would be a major undertaking on its own.
You need to troubleshoot using tools like ping and traceroute to determine at which hop the packet losses are occurring. The reason I mention ISP issues as a possibility is because many times in the past when someone posted on these forums about packet losses, the issue ended up being an ISP, modem, or Ethernet cabling issue rather than a firmware issue. Packet routing is a very basic feature on the router, and any major issue there would impact virtually everyone if there really was an issue. You need to test for the more likely causes before looking at the least likely one.Same as the other user.. I'm smart enough to have plugged in directly to my modem. That's the first thing I do is to plug my desktop into my cable modem to be sure this isn't the case. I knew in my posts I would have to list every detail or I'd get replies like this. I'll be more thorough in the future.
Hi Yenic, I have the same router as you running on 386.5 without any issues. BTW, if there's anyone on this forum I would follow advice regarding networking without thinking twice it is from RMerlin.Same as the other user.. I'm smart enough to have plugged in directly to my modem. That's the first thing I do is to plug my desktop into my cable modem to be sure this isn't the case. I knew in my posts I would have to list every detail or I'd get replies like this. I'll be more thorough in the future.
Just like any other filesystem you would only want to format it if it becomes corrupted or you want to erase it's contents.Because I saw this mentioned earlier I do like to ask- JFFS partition- why does it need to be formatted for?
Should I format it from time to time?
Any more knowledge about this JFFS partition formatting?
Just like any other filesystem you would only want to format it if it becomes corrupted or you want to erase it's contents.
I had a slowly dying router drive me nuts for months. The only indication I had of a problem was dropped packets, occasionally. Other than having a known working spare for comparison, which is how I finally figured out the problem, subtle hardware problems can be annoying.BTW that doesn't prove anything, as I never claimed my issue is specific to all 66U_B1s. It's a false premise to assume that I'm blaming the firmware or router.
What I've suggested is that my hardware either went bad by coincidence going from 386.4->386.5, or there's something that needs a cleansing my router's memory. I noted when I did a factory reset after going back to 386.3_2, my Wake On Lan settings were still there. So something isn't quite right. I appreciate all advice, as one guy suggested reflashing- that has been helpful.
I get the point RMerlin was making- it was a general statement against being narrowminded on the solution. And it's a point well taken by me. As when you go through each one, ethernet cable? Same cable, working fine direct to the modem. Makes sense that wouldn't be it. Ethernet port? Does the same speed/latency issues on wifi. For my changes, I do nothing custom- no scripts, other than standard changes, all I do is enable secure DNS. Disabling it changes nothing in regards to my router. What does make sense for me to do is the trace route, I'm willing to bet it's lagging around 192.168.1.1.. but I'll go for it and report back.
Many years ago, I had very similar issues with an Asus router. It was resolved by flashing an entirely different firmware (Tomato) and then going back to Asuswrt. That required the Restoration Tool (though I don't think it existed at that time, and I had to use something else). And things were no longer wonky.
I'm open to any and all suggestions, I'll do them. I've flashed from 386.3_2->386.4->386.5->386.3_2->386.5. Each of those steps with a factory reset and reconfig by hand. I'd stand on my head at this point to fix this.
One thing I want to try is the Asus Restoration Tool after work. I'm hoping that essentially does bit by bit deletion of the memory space, and then does a verification after install for the firmware of my choice. Whatever it does to restore borked routers can't hurt the state mine may be in. And I'll do some packet tracing.
This was also the case with the other user that appeared to be having issues, @Incubus32. He said he was doing factory resets after flashing each firmware but on further questioning it obviously wasn't actually happening. That effectively negated all of his testing. Maybe if the factory resets had worked things would have been resolved by now.I noted when I did a factory reset after going back to 386.3_2, my Wake On Lan settings were still there. So something isn't quite right.
Check with traceroute and ping to determine at which hop packets are getting lost.That's kind of where I'm at. I think it's failing.. but I want to try everything I can first. I wouldn't be desperate if the AXE16000 was on the market already. Q1, has to be imminent.
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