elrengo
Regular Contributor
Yes with out notice. As I say before the issue is in Asus Device. not in CablemodemHave you Googled "Your ISP's DHCP does not function correctly"?
OE
Yes with out notice. As I say before the issue is in Asus Device. not in CablemodemHave you Googled "Your ISP's DHCP does not function correctly"?
OE
Good Morning All,
Frequent visitor, infrequent poster, so I'll start with a big THANK YOU to all those who help me through their posts and don't know it. I hope you're all staying safe throughout this current worldwide pandemic.
I thought I would log on and share my experience and ultimate fix to the "Your ISP's DHCP did not function correctly" which I originally diagnosed as being the random "Internet Disconnected" problem as well as "Max number of concurrent DNS queries reached".
Firstly, I will say, that I update the modem regularly and following the update do a hard reboot. Thats it for maintenance.
My internet service is Cable provided by Optus in Australia and the modem I have is a CM500V-1STAUS running V101.08 (not latest) FW. Its just a dumb modem with no routing capabilities (e.g. not an all in one) so no need to run it in bridge mode.
My router is a Asus RT-AC88U bought retail in Australia and has been flashed with latest (pretty much always) Asuswrt-Merlin FW since day 1. Currently V384.16 (was V384.14 when I started noticing the issues).
I run a setup which includes:
- Static IP's to ALL clients
- OpenVPN Client (setup to provide connection through the VPN to only certain IP's while connected and no connection if the VPN is down)
- Side by side Wireless bands (2G and 5G)
- All of the features enabled as per the available functionality and the security scan (except 1 port forward)
- Adaptive QoS for media streaming
- Even mix of fixed and wireless clients
- Network is full of mix of clients from Android, Apple, IoT, work laptops, Google devices etc.
Other than the above, I pretty much run default settings.
Very straight forward. It had run great (or I had not realised issues) for many years until recently. Much like many people, working from home due to COVID-19 I was beginning to rely on the router much more than I ever had. It is over the past couple of weeks that I had noticed those "issues". I out the issues in quotes as I have a feeling that they some could have been a symptom of the other or even my approach to maintenance. I didn't feel like it had anything to do with my use of the functionality of the router.
I tried all the "fixes" and nothing worked. The only thing that seemed to work was a reboot of the router which I was doing at an increasing rate (12 times in an 8 hour period at one point). Then I came upon some advice that seemed to crop up from time to time suggesting a flash of the router to the FW I wanted to run and then a factory reset. Urgh. I did NOT want to do that. So time consuming. So annoying. So many settings to have to write down and then re input (most advice I read advised against restoring settings from a backup).
So, I persisted stubbornly through the last week (pregnant primary school teacher GF working from home and not very happy with apparent unstable connection especially when trying to run Zoom and Webex sessions with kids) of continuous intermittent internet connection, router reboots and things being thrown at me when internet drops at the worst possible moment (not much of an issue for me as I run off a seperate Telstra dongle for work).
Yesterday was the last straw. I bit the bullet. Noted down all my key settings, updated to the latest FW and did a factory reset. Re input my static IP table, input VPN settings (and assigned those IPS to the access table), sorted wireless settings (decided to go with new and slightly different access point names so I could also investigate if any client was causing issues), enabled all router features and truly earned my beer.
The result? Everything is perfect again. It has been running since 7pm last night (it is now 8:29am) without a drop in connection or any one of those "issues" being noted in the log. In fact the log is almost quiet, filled only with a log of the hourly renewal of the VPN TLS key. If it wasn't for that, the log would be all but empty.
I know it might not be what some want to hear (or read as it is) but doing a reset (especially if you have been running for a long time after many FW upgrades) might just be your answer. It is a ball ache but you can help yourself by noting your settings beforehand so you can input faster. I think all the time I spent troubleshooting and trying to avoid a reset, I could have done a reset 4 times over.
Now I am sat here, on my day off (like many businesses mine has asked if we would take some AL while we are in this current pandemic - so I am on a 4 day week till end of June), with a happy GF working in her office on a stable connection with nothing for me to do today but startup up the pellet smoker and smoke some beef ribs while chugging a few (or maybe several) beers.
To quote Albus Dumbledore I hope someone finds this post "entertaining and instructive" if not just generally helpful.
Stay safe and stay indoors.
Good Morning All,
Frequent visitor, infrequent poster, so I'll start with a big THANK YOU to all those who help me through their posts and don't know it. I hope you're all staying safe throughout this current worldwide pandemic.
I thought I would log on and share my experience and ultimate fix to the "Your ISP's DHCP did not function correctly" which I originally diagnosed as being the random "Internet Disconnected" problem as well as "Max number of concurrent DNS queries reached".
Firstly, I will say, that I update the modem regularly and following the update do a hard reboot. Thats it for maintenance.
My internet service is Cable provided by Optus in Australia and the modem I have is a CM500V-1STAUS running V101.08 (not latest) FW. Its just a dumb modem with no routing capabilities (e.g. not an all in one) so no need to run it in bridge mode.
My router is a Asus RT-AC88U bought retail in Australia and has been flashed with latest (pretty much always) Asuswrt-Merlin FW since day 1. Currently V384.16 (was V384.14 when I started noticing the issues).
I run a setup which includes:
- Static IP's to ALL clients
- OpenVPN Client (setup to provide connection through the VPN to only certain IP's while connected and no connection if the VPN is down)
- Side by side Wireless bands (2G and 5G)
- All of the features enabled as per the available functionality and the security scan (except 1 port forward)
- Adaptive QoS for media streaming
- Even mix of fixed and wireless clients
- Network is full of mix of clients from Android, Apple, IoT, work laptops, Google devices etc.
Other than the above, I pretty much run default settings.
Very straight forward. It had run great (or I had not realised issues) for many years until recently. Much like many people, working from home due to COVID-19 I was beginning to rely on the router much more than I ever had. It is over the past couple of weeks that I had noticed those "issues". I out the issues in quotes as I have a feeling that they some could have been a symptom of the other or even my approach to maintenance. I didn't feel like it had anything to do with my use of the functionality of the router.
I tried all the "fixes" and nothing worked. The only thing that seemed to work was a reboot of the router which I was doing at an increasing rate (12 times in an 8 hour period at one point). Then I came upon some advice that seemed to crop up from time to time suggesting a flash of the router to the FW I wanted to run and then a factory reset. Urgh. I did NOT want to do that. So time consuming. So annoying. So many settings to have to write down and then re input (most advice I read advised against restoring settings from a backup).
So, I persisted stubbornly through the last week (pregnant primary school teacher GF working from home and not very happy with apparent unstable connection especially when trying to run Zoom and Webex sessions with kids) of continuous intermittent internet connection, router reboots and things being thrown at me when internet drops at the worst possible moment (not much of an issue for me as I run off a seperate Telstra dongle for work).
Yesterday was the last straw. I bit the bullet. Noted down all my key settings, updated to the latest FW and did a factory reset. Re input my static IP table, input VPN settings (and assigned those IPS to the access table), sorted wireless settings (decided to go with new and slightly different access point names so I could also investigate if any client was causing issues), enabled all router features and truly earned my beer.
The result? Everything is perfect again. It has been running since 7pm last night (it is now 8:29am) without a drop in connection or any one of those "issues" being noted in the log. In fact the log is almost quiet, filled only with a log of the hourly renewal of the VPN TLS key. If it wasn't for that, the log would be all but empty.
I know it might not be what some want to hear (or read as it is) but doing a reset (especially if you have been running for a long time after many FW upgrades) might just be your answer. It is a ball ache but you can help yourself by noting your settings beforehand so you can input faster. I think all the time I spent troubleshooting and trying to avoid a reset, I could have done a reset 4 times over.
Now I am sat here, on my day off (like many businesses mine has asked if we would take some AL while we are in this current pandemic - so I am on a 4 day week till end of June), with a happy GF working in her office on a stable connection with nothing for me to do today but startup up the pellet smoker and smoke some beef ribs while chugging a few (or maybe several) beers.
To quote Albus Dumbledore I hope someone finds this post "entertaining and instructive" if not just generally helpful.
Stay safe and stay indoors.
@danioj
The only thing that worked for me was upgrading to the latest firmware and then doing a factory default reset. With over 40 devices in the DHCP manual reservation table, it was painful. (I wish there was a reliable means of capturing just this data and then being able to reload just this data.)
just too time-consuming to reload them after factory resets.
nvram get dhcp_staticlist > /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/dhcplist.txt
nvram get custom_clientlist > /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/custom_clientlist.txt
cp /jffs/nvram/dhcp_hostnames /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/jfssnvram_dhcp_hostnames.txt
cp -r /jffs/usericon /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/
cd /mnt/ASUS
nvram set dhcp_staticlist="`cat /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/dhcplist.txt`"
nvram set custom_clientlist="`cat /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/custom_clientlist.txt`"
cp /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/jfssnvram_dhcp_hostnames.txt /jffs/nvram/dhcp_hostnames
cp -r /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/usericon /jffs/
nvram commit && reboot
Looks like you got those commands from this post.A user here on SNB posted the following save/restore commands (ASUS is the USB drive):
(unfortunately, I can't find the source to give credit to the right person)
Save:
Code:nvram get dhcp_staticlist > /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/dhcplist.txt nvram get custom_clientlist > /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/custom_clientlist.txt cp /jffs/nvram/dhcp_hostnames /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/jfssnvram_dhcp_hostnames.txt cp -r /jffs/usericon /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/
Restore:
Code:cd /mnt/ASUS nvram set dhcp_staticlist="`cat /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/dhcplist.txt`" nvram set custom_clientlist="`cat /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/custom_clientlist.txt`" cp /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/jfssnvram_dhcp_hostnames.txt /jffs/nvram/dhcp_hostnames cp -r /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/usericon /jffs/ nvram commit && reboot
I would like someone like @ColinTaylor to look at the above and confirm what it does. I see it creates a folder /backup with the extracted data, then restores the files to corresponding places. I never used it though and I'm not very familiar with jffs contents. Not sure if it works on different routers either.
nvram get dhcp_staticlist > /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/dhcp_staticlist.txt
nvram get dhcp_hostnames > /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/dhcp_hostnames.txt
nvram get custom_clientlist > /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/custom_clientlist.txt
cp -a /jffs/usericon /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/
nvram set dhcp_staticlist="$(cat /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/dhcp_staticlist.txt)"
nvram set dhcp_hostnames="$(cat /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/dhcp_hostnames.txt)"
nvram set custom_clientlist="$(cat /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/custom_clientlist.txt)"
cp -a /tmp/mnt/ASUS/backup/usericon /jffs/
nvram commit && reboot
Looks like you got those commands from this post.
There must be other reasons. My ASUS RT-AC68 used to chug along happily for weeks with no notifications, and then suddenly flash that error message with no action that would change its address.This is caused by the limitation where either the modem, or provider allows only one MAC connected to the modem. It remembers the MAC that connected first, so when you connect another, DHCP does not give out the address and the router shows this message.
Which means that for whatever reason the provider was now expecting another MAC.There must be other reasons. My ASUS RT-AC68 used to chug along happily for weeks with no notifications, and then suddenly flash that error message with no action that would change its address.
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