karmasmessenger
Occasional Visitor
how can i tell though? i am totally new to this
i have 3 ppl streaming on tvs at the same time
See the readme here:I get random lagspikes, during gaming sessions while others on my network watch netflix, and youtube, I can't figure out how to strictly bump up the packets on my gaming devices, first on queue, is there a guide on how to do this so i dont continue to flood the support pages?
3 UHD Tvs, 1 desktop 4 laptops, ring, blink 2 alex, nest and 7 tablets, if im not mistaken alongside 6 phones
That depends on how traffic is being allocated on the network. Plus traffic that relies on transmission using upload connection can still suffer or create additional bottleneck. While I agree that the results may vary among noticeable performance gains, there is still the possibility that enabling QoS will produce some kind of performance advantage on networks that host a variety of different connection types which are all expected to share the same connection at the same moment in time. If we were talking about a typical symmetrical 1Gbps connection , I might tend to agree more with you, however the connection is significantly asymmetrical meaning the upload and download speeds are significantly different.Have you tried with no QoS? With 1000/40 there is a chance you are hurting yourself with QoS attempts.
Albiet there should be an overall reduction in good( or legitimate) packets being dropped since only the ones creating congestion and/or errors should be getting dropped to ensure such fairness.That's odd as I would expect dropped packets with QoS enabled - there's an implicit agreement with QoS that packets can be dropped to ensure fairness...
there is still the possibility that enabling QoS will produce some kind of performance advantage
Of course, but few people streaming on a Gigabit download ISP is unlikely to be the issue. Few people torrenting is a different story. If this is the case limiting the upload on the clients side is the better strategy than fighting with QoS on the router. Gamers who stream online their game play should know they need fast upload. Gamers who connect to remote servers should know there is latency issue they can't fix on their side. It's like you know what the issue is and you fix it (if possible) versus you rely on the router to fix the mistakes you make. The router will most likely fail to do so. Also many people forget the residential ISP lines are shared between subscribers and not guaranteed. More speed/latency issues are expected in high Internet traffic hours. Few speedtest obsessed neighbors hitting the line every hour may also affect Internet experience.
Based on the question the user asked, the random lag spiked they are experiencing could also be related signal delays or Network jitter which could indicate a missconfiguration in their QoS.I get random lagspikes, during gaming sessions while others on my network watch netflix, and youtube, I can't figure out how to strictly bump up the packets on my gaming devices, first on queue, is there a guide on how to do this so i dont continue to flood the support pages?
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