randomName
Very Senior Member
Cake? Yes, chocolate cake is always better!
But I haven't used that on a router.
LOL, is that really a variation of Cake? I just read Cake is the latest.
Cake? Yes, chocolate cake is always better!
But I haven't used that on a router.
LOL, is that really a variation of Cake? I just read Cake is the latest.
No, just trying to be funny.
I haven't used Cake, let alone heard of it before.
In the Adaptive QoS, QoS tab, turn on 'Enable QoS' and then select Adaptive, Manual and fq_codel.
It's as easy as pie! Or Cake! lol...
Is that included with Asus firmware? I'm on the stock Asus firmware, 3.0.0.4.384_45149
Sorry, I don't know what the stock firmware looks like. I'm describing RMerlin's Asuswrt fork 384.10_2 version.
Ah, ok. I thought maybe there was a way to install fq_codel while using the stock Asus firmware
Sorry for giving false hope. I saw the RT-AC86U in the thread title and mistakenly assumed we were in the Asuswrt-Merlin thread too.
There are more than a couple things that effect latency. Buffer bloat is one. You are probably right to focus on buffer bloat as it is something that you can likely fix.I am absolutely 100% not referring to "low latency" as rtt, I am referring to the router bloat, or the time a packet is sitting in queue in my router.
Good call. (And, again, IMO, this is a good indicator for a low speed Internet connection but it may not represent your reality on a high speed connection.)Use a site like dslreports.com/speedtest
I would "think" that "automatic" figures out what your ISP speed is and goes with that? (Edit: turns out I wasn't even close. Auto sets speeds to 1,800 Mbps thereby automatically breaking everything : -) I think what you might want to do is run multiple speed tests and pick a number that best represents what you think your speed is; maybe the mean, median, mode or the lowest number. Then take about 80% of that and use "manual" to set your speeds to those numbers. The idea is to leave a little room in the pipe for like an emergency "hey gamer, send me more" packet.... used Automatic for the bandwidth setting
experiment.Change the Auto bandwidth to Manual and now make changes
I believe that "automatic" figures out what your ISP speed is and goes with that.
That's a good joke.
The automatic setting on Asus routers only sets manual upload and download limits to 1800mbps. It does NOT figure out your ISP speed. It does not leave QoS in a remotely functioning state.
I am 99.99% convinced its UI eye candy so the QoS page looks good customers at first glance. A majority of users aren't technical enough to notice it does not work properly.
--
I have a pretty detailed write up on how QoS actually behind the scense in my FreshJR_QoS thread.
(That thread can help you learn more about how traffic control system/structure works and provides a mod to fix poor default parameters)
Just the first post if you want to read about how QOS works.
The second post if you want to install the script and get information about optimal settings.
Don’t read anything after third post as the first three have all relavent QOS information consolidated.
After some thought I think I'm going to give the Merlin firmware a try again and then give fq_codel a shot.
Thanks again.
EDIT: I just read the Networking section and it says the RT-AC86U (Arm based models only) How do I know if I have an Arm based 86U ?
Easy; you do.
Thanks! I checked around his posts in the Merlin sub forum, and I remember there was a process to switching over to his custom firmware. IIRC it involved restoring default settings but before or after the install part I don't remember.
Wow, there is no way I woulda guessed that <lol>That's a good joke. The automatic setting on Asus routers only sets manual upload and download limits to 1800mbps.
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