semmelbroesel
Occasional Visitor
Hi.
I have two questions in one.
My router will occasionally crash - meaning the WiFi signal is still up, but the internet connection is gone, both wired and wireless. The cable modem is fine.
Restarting the router typically fixes it - sometimes I have to do it multiple times, sometimes I have to resort to the usual spiel of "power off on modem and router, plugin modem after 30 sec, plugin router after 30 sec" that I grew up with in my tech support days.
I have about 40 devices on my network - four 24/7 streaming security cams, many phones and tablets, video streaming, some online gaming, and I do the occasional big file download/upload.
I'm currently on the official Asus firmware 3.0.0.4.380_3479 - I haven't updated in a while.
So first question - what causes a router to drop internet?
The System Log doesn't look very helpful - there are no entries for a month until my latest restart a couple of days ago:
I'm also wondering what the SIGALRM for disk_monitor means...
Do I have too many devices with too much traffic on that router? Are there any devices that I should not keep on the network?
Right now, I am using only a few percent of CPU and about 30% RAM.
The second question is: Given that it crashes, is this router good enough for 1Gbps fiber internet?
I'm thinking of upgrading to the RT-AC5300 router, but first I'd like to know your thoughts.
Thanks in advance, and let me know if you need more information.
I have two questions in one.
My router will occasionally crash - meaning the WiFi signal is still up, but the internet connection is gone, both wired and wireless. The cable modem is fine.
Restarting the router typically fixes it - sometimes I have to do it multiple times, sometimes I have to resort to the usual spiel of "power off on modem and router, plugin modem after 30 sec, plugin router after 30 sec" that I grew up with in my tech support days.
I have about 40 devices on my network - four 24/7 streaming security cams, many phones and tablets, video streaming, some online gaming, and I do the occasional big file download/upload.
I'm currently on the official Asus firmware 3.0.0.4.380_3479 - I haven't updated in a while.
So first question - what causes a router to drop internet?
The System Log doesn't look very helpful - there are no entries for a month until my latest restart a couple of days ago:
Code:
Aug 21 10:34:29 rc_service: ntp 726:notify_rc restart_upnp
Aug 21 10:34:29 miniupnpd[727]: shutting down MiniUPnPd
Aug 21 10:34:29 miniupnpd[737]: version 1.9 started
Aug 21 10:34:29 miniupnpd[737]: HTTP listening on port 39155
Aug 21 10:34:29 miniupnpd[737]: Listening for NAT-PMP/PCP traffic on port 5351
Aug 21 10:34:29 kernel: * Make sure sizeof(struct sw_struct)=160 is consistent
Aug 21 10:34:30 rc_service: ntp 726:notify_rc restart_diskmon
Aug 21 10:34:30 disk_monitor: Finish
Aug 21 10:34:30 kernel: sizeof forward param = 160
Aug 21 10:34:32 disk monitor: be idle
Aug 21 10:34:35 rc_service: udhcpc 548:notify_rc start_firewall
Aug 21 10:34:35 dhcp client: bound xxxxx via xxxxxx during 282533 seconds.
Aug 21 10:34:35 start_nat_rules: apply the nat_rules(/tmp/nat_rules_eth0_eth0)!
Aug 21 10:34:36 rc_service: udhcpc 919:notify_rc start_firewall
Aug 21 10:34:36 rc_service: waitting "start_firewall" via ...
Aug 21 10:34:38 WAN Connection: ISP's DHCP did not function properly.
Aug 21 10:34:38 DualWAN: skip single wan wan_led_control - WANRED off
Aug 21 10:34:38 start_nat_rules: apply the nat_rules(/tmp/nat_rules_eth0_eth0)!
Aug 21 10:34:38 wan: finish adding multi routes
Aug 21 10:34:38 stop_nat_rules: apply the redirect_rules!
Aug 21 10:34:38 rc_service: udhcpc 919:notify_rc stop_upnp
Aug 21 10:34:38 rc_service: waitting "start_firewall" via udhcpc ...
Aug 21 10:34:39 rc_service: udhcpc 919:notify_rc start_upnp
Aug 21 10:34:39 rc_service: waitting "stop_upnp" via udhcpc ...
Aug 21 10:34:39 miniupnpd[737]: shutting down MiniUPnPd
Aug 21 10:34:41 miniupnpd[1136]: version 1.9 started
Aug 21 10:34:41 miniupnpd[1136]: HTTP listening on port 55242
Aug 21 10:34:41 miniupnpd[1136]: Listening for NAT-PMP/PCP traffic on port 5351
Aug 21 10:34:41 miniupnpd[1136]: upnp_event_recv: recv(): Connection reset by peer
Aug 21 10:34:44 WAN Connection: WAN was restored.
Aug 21 10:34:44 start_nat_rules: apply the nat_rules(/tmp/nat_rules_eth0_eth0)!
Aug 21 10:34:45 rc_service: udhcpc 919:notify_rc start_firewall
Aug 21 10:34:45 dhcp client: bound xxxxxx via xxxxxx during 282517 seconds.
Aug 21 10:34:46 start_nat_rules: apply the nat_rules(/tmp/nat_rules_eth0_eth0)!
Aug 21 10:34:59 crond[479]: time disparity of 2660614 minutes detected
Aug 21 10:36:19 hour monitor: ntp sync fail, will retry after 120 sec
Aug 21 11:00:32 disk_monitor: Got SIGALRM...
Aug 21 23:00:32 disk_monitor: Got SIGALRM...
I'm also wondering what the SIGALRM for disk_monitor means...
Do I have too many devices with too much traffic on that router? Are there any devices that I should not keep on the network?
Right now, I am using only a few percent of CPU and about 30% RAM.
The second question is: Given that it crashes, is this router good enough for 1Gbps fiber internet?
I'm thinking of upgrading to the RT-AC5300 router, but first I'd like to know your thoughts.
Thanks in advance, and let me know if you need more information.