F
fantom
Guest
Hi, does it make sense to set MTU to 1492 for LAN clients to completely avoid packet fragmentation completly?
Hi, does it make sense to set MTU to 1492 for LAN clients to completely avoid packet fragmentation completly?
Maybe. Local clients should be able to figure out the MTU for a given path. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Path_MTU_Discovery
Hi, does it make sense to set MTU to 1492 for LAN clients to completely avoid packet fragmentation completly?
Only yesterday I was having an issue with PMTU due to ICMP being blocked (regularly across the web). It is by no means an infallible protocol.
I ended up reducing my MTU as the solution.
The problem is more prevalent when using VPNs for data transfer as the overhead is significant and the packet payload is large (this was the scenario I was grappling with).
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
you would only set the mtu in the router rather than each indvidual client, and mtu is depdnat on weather or not your running pppoe pppoa, ipoe, ipoa etcHi, does it make sense to set MTU to 1492 for LAN clients to completely avoid packet fragmentation completly?
You reduced it at the LAN clients or at the gateway router?
On the router.
PMTU then worked locally in my LAN to dynamically inform my clients of the limited MTU size.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I think OP is questioning whether to force all LAN clients (via DHCP or manually?) to 1492 or allow PMTU negotiation at the router to do it's job.
I dunno. More clarification is needed from OP.
Thanks for the replies. I was indeed referring to setting MTU=1492 on all LAN clients. The WAN is already set with 1492 and if the LAN is 1500, I thought the router would have to split every packet from LAN (1500) into two, because of PPPoE (1492).
I configured dnsmasq with "dhcp-option=lan,26,1492" and all Linux clients obey it. Windows ignores this option, so that one is set manually. I also set MTU=1492 on all router's LAN side interfaces including wireless.
The goal was to make sure the router is not in the business of fragmenting the outgoing packets. Am I over thinking it?
Update. Before this change I did not have any issues with my Internet connection. The thinking was to optimize the lights out of it so the the router does not do unnecessary work
Welcome To SNBForums
SNBForums is a community for anyone who wants to learn about or discuss the latest in wireless routers, network storage and the ins and outs of building and maintaining a small network.
If you'd like to post a question, simply register and have at it!
While you're at it, please check out SmallNetBuilder for product reviews and our famous Router Charts, Ranker and plenty more!