When I used a Streaming rule for my TV, I never saw it streaming UDP, so I think TCP only is fine.Should I change it to reflect both vs. TCP, or it does not not make a difference at all.
When I used a Streaming rule for my TV, I never saw it streaming UDP, so I think TCP only is fine.Should I change it to reflect both vs. TCP, or it does not not make a difference at all.
Maybe adding the wan overhead and atm settings to FlexQoS UI for 386.x Adaptive QoS would be nice, if possible Also there's a minor discrepancy between Game Transferring and Game Download labels, I assume they're the same.You can switch to Traditional QoS and set it and then change back to Adaptive QoS. Or change it with the nvram set command.
Only if your connection is based on ATM. Usually DOCSIS is not ATM, but I'm not too smart in that area.
I have no experience with 4g connections.Hey mate,
I have 40ms, 90down/49up 4g connection, what would I select for wan packet overhead and should I tick ATM?
Cheers mate, hope you are well!
That makes two of us - anyone else know what to set for wan packet overhead for 4g connections in qos plus whether to tick atm or not?I have no experience with 4g connections.
Would not worry about Wan Packet overhead with 4G. However, you may want to look into MTU. From what I've read 1500 bytes default is too big for 3G & 4G. MTU should be between 1430 and 1420 bytes.That makes two of us - anyone else know what to set for wan packet overhead for 4g connections in qos plus whether to tick atm or not?
There isn’t any problem with Work-From-Home and Streaming. The problem is with Learn-From-Home and Streaming. Learn-From-Home should always be below Streaming.Is it "Now" acceptable to place Work-From-Home above Video & Audio Streaming or does it still cause problems?
What throughput do you actually achieve with QoS enabled on a gigabit connection? The rule of thumb is to keep reducing your bandwidth until the grade improves. You don’t mention what your bandwidth settings currently are, so it’s hard to offer any recommendations.@dave14305 I have an ATT fiber 1gb symmetrical connection with which I get D+ bufferbloat test with QoS disabled. With QoS on and fq_codel enabled (all other FlexQoS settings set to default) I get a B. However, the culprit appears to be upload latency under load. Download ping stays steady but upload ping jumps between 0 and 150ms, sometimes more.
Any suggestions as to what I can tweak or why this is occurring on upload?
What throughput do you actually achieve with QoS enabled on a gigabit connection? The rule of thumb is to keep reducing your bandwidth until the grade improves. You don’t mention what your bandwidth settings currently are, so it’s hard to offer any recommendations.
It will be hard to feel sorry for you symmetrical gigabit users.
Take upload down to 50 just to see if any amount of limiting will help it. If yes, keep increasing the bandwidth until it gets bad again, then lower it slightly.Haha fair enough. To be honest I don't need that much bandwidth, ATT just had a great promotion.
I get about 940mbps at the router using speed test, I set the limits to 845 which is roughly 10% less. I went as low as 500 but the upload latency is still all over the place.
I realize this is a first world problem but my son and I play video games and I'm tired of his whining
Any advice would be appreciated.
I checked the Xbox that is in the DMZ at it says 1370 is the MTU however in my 86u wan setting page I have it set to 1500.Would not worry about Wan Packet overhead with 4G. However, you may want to look into MTU. From what I've read 1500 bytes default is too big for 3G & 4G. MTU should be between 1430 and 1420 bytes.
An offline device shouldn’t generate new traffic. Old connections should eventually expire and not be displayed anymore.
Good news?I think you might expect bad latency with QoS because of the minimum burst parameters that Adaptive QoS uses (3200 bytes). It may be a little too high for your download bandwidth (19Mbps) and certainly too high for your upload bandwidth (1Mbps). I'll have to think if there's a better way to handle smaller bandwidth.
If you had an import/export options to csv the user could easily reorder the rules and make a backup of their rules at the same time. Similar to how the lan static ip section lets you export a list of them. I just had to redo my router (I added a usb hard drive and made it a nfs mount....tried to copy 300 files and at 170 files the router went into lala land and never came back....hard reset was all I could do. I would have enjoyed being able to import my rules as opposed to manually create them all again.)Some rules look weird (Game Downloads going to work-from-home, cams going to Gaming). That Web Surfing rule is very unusual since it’s filtering on local port, which is unlikely to occur. Comparing your earlier debug output, you might have put the ports in the wrong field the second time. But I still believe that is a bad rule anyway. I’d delete it. Too much traffic is on port 443 these days.
Sorry the process isn’t easier, but you might consider starting over again.
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