Try the preset for RFC2684/RFC1483 Bridged LLC/Snap 32 with ATM checked. I am using this with the Beta3 of 380.67 on ADSL2 with a LLC bridged modem. I do not use PPPoE.How do i calcualte the wan packet ovherhead for a vdsl2 connection llc based or vc based bridge mode, but its ipoe (dhcp) encapsulation not pppoe, just need it for qos.
Vdsl2 doesnt use atm, on nbn here, we have amix of pppoe and ipoe for authentication.Try the preset for RFC2684/RFC1483 Bridged LLC/Snap 32 with ATM checked. I am using this with the Beta3 of 380.67 on ADSL2 with a LLC bridged modem. I do not use PPPoE.
There is a lot of scholarly work on the web about packet overhead if you want to learn to be a network engineer. Otherwise, experiment to see what works best for you!
Does that also account for llc or vc-mux encapsulation? would be nice if the presets did account for it just incase it actually matters.For VDSL2 use the "Bridged/IPoE VDSL" preset. VDSL2 generally does not use ATM.
Does that also account for llc or vc-mux encapsulation? would be nice if the presets did account for it just incase it actually matters.
got it thnx very muchI don't know. I just took the values documented by Lede.
its probably to account for over heads that exist, regardless of the speeds. That affect the accuracy of qos.If one uses the actual max speed test results rather than the published line speed, why would one need to build the overhead into the calls? Isn't that double accounting?
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asl2 mtu as far as i know is 1492 in pppoe, 1500 in pppoa but only pppoe works if your bridging, also the over head does apply i check it, well in my case there is a noticeable latency and packet resposinveness diffrence in my case, also is you modem set to bridgemode. I do suspect that the reason you having an issue is because you havent set the correct values for wan packet overhead.I have tried several settings for wan packet overhead on my slow ADSL2 running through a bridged modem router, PK5001Z. Most values from the preset made speeds slower. Ethernet preset was OK as well as a manual entry of 28. 28 bytes is the header for a MTU of 1500 which I was able to verify with a ping to a remote site of 1472 bytes.
Am beginning to believe that the wan packet overhead does not apply for the most part when the router and modem are separate devices. I am sure there is someone who can prove me wrong and i welcome the discussion! Also feel that there may be a connection between MTU and wan packet overhead in some systems...
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This is what merlin says about it, post 117I'm still not convinced by the use of packet overhead when one sets max up/down to the *observed* max rate.
I DO see how it applies when it is applied to the max documented line speed such as 100 Mbps Ethernet, a VDSL sync speed etc.
I also see how recommendations are often to set the max speed manually to 90-95% of actual ... but that's more to allow for some natural variation, esp on cable etc. Setting an overhead has a similar effect, but the reasoning is different.
I also note the "auto" setting for bandwidth doesn't seem to work on the ASUS sw, but reading around ddwrt it seems as if they have a more sophisticated algorithm which can work within a 1/8-full speed actual throughput situation by measuring bandwidth/pings
All this being said I'm not a QOS expert so add the obligatory pinch of salt ;-)
Oh and very grateful to see some focus in this area, as QOS can be rather useful (and a reminder we need faster router CPUs!!)
awesome, if you do mange to find a definative value for Vdsl2 IPOE(dhcp) anex B or A profile 17a modem briged with a router id apreaciate it very much, been trying to nail the value, tossing up bettwen 19, the value form merlins refrence document, and 22 which is from the calculation.Will be doing more reading on the subject. A very interesting area for sure.
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