After doing some more digging I may have a theory,
Looking in the log I can see 3074 is forwarded via UPNP, which is the default xbox live port, so I look at which device this is and it turns out the PS4 is currently using 3074, so looking online it seems that advanced warfare uses this port maybe on the ps4 as well.
So it might be that these devices are fighting each other and this is the reason for my current strict NAT on xbox one but Open nat on advanced warfare.
advanced warfare opens its own port on game startup via upnp on the ps4 and one
it shows up as demonware
i have
1x ps4
1x one
4x 360
2x ps3
all are open nat
stop farting around and use upnp
if you cant trust your internal network to use upnp
you shouldnt be on the internet
I doubt it. Upnp is designed to forward ports automatically to multiple consoles even if they have to use different ports to connect to the same service. If a port is taken up like 3074, upnp would just use another port in it's place to connect to Xbox Live with a different console. All upnp is really doing is port forwarding automatically so you don't have to do it manually.
Thanks for the amazing reply but I am using UPnP and have no forwarded ports
I have put the Xbox one into the DMZ and it's now open, I can either have an open xbox one or open nat on advanced warfare not both.
I also don't want to have to turn both consoles off completely when I have finished using them rather than just putting them into rest mode.
You will have to enable energy saving mode on each console to get an open nat on both using upnp.
Yeah it would seem I can get around that with DMZ now anyway and just use it that way. From what I can gather advanced warfare is the only game that uses port 3074 on the ps4 hence the start of the problem.
The problem has nothing to do with the ports your consoles are using! By which, I mean it has nothing to do with these two different consoles that may use the same port from time to time. Upnp will take care of all this automatically.
Next time your Nat is moderate or strict in COD, go into your Xbox one network settings and run the multi player network test, when it is finished, press LT, RT. RB. RL at the same time and the XB1 will run a NAT test and indicate what NAT you are really behind, you want a cone NAT, if you do have a cone NAT log into COD and it should be open now. If this does not work, clear the XB1 Cache by holding down the power button for 30 seconds and power it back on. The green XBOX logo screen will pop up if you did it right. Then do the above steps all over again, good luck!
All you have to do to clear the Xbox One cache when you turn it off is go to Settings/Power&Startup then select Turn Xbox off. This is way simpler then holding down the button if you have instant-on enabled. One way to indicate that the Xbox One has been turned completely off is to identify that the power adapter light has turned orange. If it is still white when you turn it off your Xbox One did not completely turn itself off.
I am pretty sure that does not actually clear the cache, has anyone confirmed this? Have a reputable link?
http://www.ign.com/wikis/xbox-one/How_to_do_a_Hard_Restart_on_Xbox_One
http://www.digitaltrends.com/gaming/xbox-one-problems-solutions/
I assume the Xbox One clears the hard drive cache itself automatically every time it is turned completely off.
Nope this method does not clear the cache as I just tried, you know the cache is cleared is when you power the XB1 back on and the green Xbox logo screen comes up first.
All of the methods I recommended to turn the Xbox One off would result in the green Xbox One logo screen to come up first. The only time the green screen doesn't come up is if you don't have energy saving mode enabled and you turn it off. If the power adapter light turns orange, then the console is completely off. If the light stays white, then the console is not in energy saving mode.
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