I know it’s not up to you entirely, but do you keep planning to keep up with the builds for RT-AX56U
Loaded factory firmware on AC86U just to try it. Went back to .16 beta3, reset, manual config. Stubby does not work. VPN server will not start. Loaded saved backup for prior .16 beta 3 and jffs. Same issues. Too late tonight to try more. Just reporting issues.
Also have an AC68U that will not start vpn server. That on .16 beta3 as well.
On main webpage, we have the option to see the connected clients. It shows us clients by Name, IP, Mac, Signal strength, TX rate, etc...
Networkmap only handles /24 networks, it cannot handle a /16 like you seem to be using.
On that client list, the IP is wrong, it shows like if the device is in a 10.1.1.x IP, but on the wireless log the IP shows fine and if I ping my devices using 10.1.100.X they ping successfully, but if I try the 10.1.1.X ip in that list, they are never found
I matched your settings and my router had "MU-MIMO" on the professional page so I turned that off too. My desktop is now stable! Woohoo.... But my phone still repeatedly drops out while I'm using the connection (oddly doesn't seem to while it's not downloading) and my chromecast still doesn't work without a reboot every time I want to use it. These issues were not present in .13 - my connection was rock solid on all devicesI play with the 5ghz channel, I set channel bandwith to 20mhz and Channel to 36(Use Wi-Fi Analyzer) to make sure it's not an issue caused by interference with other channels.
Go in the Wireless->Professional Tab
https://imgur.com/a/Dnj161x Those are my settings for 2.4ghz and 5ghz, if you are using time sensitive applications you must first of all disable TX-Bursting, AMPDU-Aggregation.
Airtime fairness may prioritize devices based on being faster/closer to the router, since my AX200 devices is the further from the router I disabled this setting.
Go to the device manager-> Intel(R) Wi-Fi 6 AX200 160Mhz and tweak this settings:
This setting prevents your wifi card from periodically searching for new Access Points, it is automatically set to "never", so your wifi card is always scanning.
- Global BG Scan Blocking: ALWAYS
You don't need this power saving feature, keeping it disabled may benefit throughput.
- MIMO power save mode: Without SMPS
*power saving feature
- U-APSD Support: disabled
It's another power saving feature, it reduces the number of receiving interrupts by randomly merging packets.
- Packets Merging: Disabled
( I may have mistranslated the name of this last setting, I can't find info about this settings that are not in my native language)
I can now play games while pinging the router with a stable 1ms, before I used to have 30-90ms spikes every 5 seconds which where quite noticeable.
Don't forget to update your AX200 drivers to 21.80.2.
In case you still want to use Class A IP address scheme then you can simply change the subnet mask in LAN>LAN IP to make it /24 or less network. I'm using it that way since ages without any issues.
P.S Some might ask here what's the point of using Class A address as Class C address, I do it just because I like the class A address scheme, it's way easier to write 10.1.1.1 than 192.168.1.1 ( less finger movement ) hehe.
I wonder if this is because there are only 8 bits available for network addresses or if it's just lazy programming.Networkmap only handles /24 networks, it cannot handle a /16 like you seem to be using.
I wonder if this is because there are only 8 bits available for network addresses or if it's just lazy programming.
That doesn't make sense to me. There are many reasons a home user would want to segment their network, particularly if they have IOT devices. Asus doesn't even make commercial gear to my knowledge, so greater network flexibility wouldn't cannibalize other product lines.It's designed to handle only /24 network (maximum number of supported clients are 255-2) since they are for SOHO, not carrier grade routers.
That doesn't make sense to me. There are many reasons a home user would want to segment their network, particularly if they have IOT devices. Asus doesn't even make commercial gear to my knowledge, so greater network flexibility wouldn't cannibalize other product lines.
That doesn't make sense to me. There are many reasons a home user would want to segment their network, particularly if they have IOT devices. Asus doesn't even make commercial gear to my knowledge, so greater network flexibility wouldn't cannibalize other product lines.
Right on. Very easy. Just use a guest network as it only has Internet access (default option for guest network).Open up a guest network slot and put all your IOT devices there.
I want to be able to make one firewall rule for all IOT devices (like blocking outgoing SYN packets). I think I can fudge it with firewall rules like 192.168.1.192/26 to cover all devices between 192.168.1.192 - 192.168.1.255 and put all the IOT devices there.Right on. Very easy. Just use a guest network as it only has Internet access (default option for guest network).
I wonder if this is because there are only 8 bits available for network addresses or if it's just lazy programming.
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