@pendetim - how did you test?
if your primary WAN is cable connection (probably cable modem in bridge mode) - I guess you have tested by pulling out UTP cable from WAN port on ASUS ? if yes, then it is super easy for ASUS, it detect that WAN port is down and it does failover
still it will interrupt your connection every X seconds checking for failback for no reason
however if you simulate Internet outage (real life scenarion) by disconnecting COAX cable on your cable modem, leaving UTP connected from cable modem to Asus router WAN port (WAN port status up), Asus router will do nothing
if you enable "Enable ping to Internet" and define target like "8.8.8.8" or something you want, only ONE lost packet will cause false alarm and connection switch, so you will end up with jumping from WAN1 to WAN2 and vise-versa, because Asus Firmware Developers are not able to understand the concept of FALSE ALARM
here are youtube video underlining my claims and tests
sorry for mediocre video quality, I have sent those videos to ASUS Firmware Developers, because they do NOT understand that failover is NOT working in REAL-LIFE
I told Asus developers to add at 3 watchdog targets like: 8.8.8.8 ; 1.1.1.1 ; 208.67.222.222 so if ping fails to ALL destination targets, connection switch should happen
however there are certain things to consider, some ISPs block ICMP if used extensively, so checking HTTP as additional watchdog is much better way to do it, if ICMP fails
here is
excellent script from
@Martineau
Monitor WAN connection state using PINGs to multiple hosts, or a single cURL 15 Byte data request and optionally a 12MB/500B WGET/CURL data transfer
https://pastebin.com/iDRDjaGV
there is no option to define Failover status:
1. Power Saving (WAN2 port down, not connected)
2. Cold-Standby (WAN2 port up, but not connected)
3. Hot-Standby (WAN2 ready AND connected, for faster connection switch)
Failback should be tested in the background without interrupting your Internet connection
it is no rocket science
I have exchanged at least 80 e-mails with ASUS, but they are ignorant
Synology got DualWAN (called SmartWAN) right,
I have sent Asus Martineau's script, if they would replace buggy wanduck with Martineau's script it would do wonders
I have respect for Merlin's great work, as well as other members of community, but Asus should be sued for false claims, marketing routers as "Dual WAN" capable