shogun6x Posted June 7, 2017 Share Posted June 7, 2017 So i have been obsessed with buffer bloat lately and after extensive testing have found that my ISP router/modem combo is the culprit. I am trying to bride that bum router so duma can do the heavy lifting. My tests show that even with the "bad" router in front of the duma the duma still helps alleviate buffer bloat the best it can. so thats good!! Right now can get everythign set up so i can go into a browser and hit 192.168.88.1 and i get the duma. From there i can go in duma - device manager - view other interface 192.168.254.1 and see my ISP router (now bridged). My LAN ipv4 address is 192.168.254.254 The problem is that i am not able to get out to the internet from there. I listed all the IP address because i wasnt sure if i had a subnet issue. I did try to put my ISP modem at IPv4 192.168.2.1 and then set the duma to 192.168.3.1 with a 255.255.255.0 mask but that didnt work either. Do i need to set my PPPoe password since i am on DLS? Here is a video of a person doign the same thing with the exact same router i have but with a different secondary router. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
shogun6x Posted June 9, 2017 Author Share Posted June 9, 2017 Ok so i took another go at it tonight. and failed again. This time around i had the PPPoE username and password. What i did was set my modem/Router into bridge mode. Went over to the R1 and turned on the PPPoE and dropped in the user name and pass. I unplugged both the R1 and modem. Put the cable into the WAN port on my moden and then put the other end into the PoE port on the duma (it was already in there). Result failure.... Overall the steps seem straight forward. I plan to have anoher go at it tomorrow but i will do ti without the duma and use a different router to see if i can get that to work at least. I poked around the forums and it seems there are a few people struggling to get the duma to work with PPPoE. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Netduma Staff Netduma Jack Posted June 9, 2017 Netduma Staff Share Posted June 9, 2017 Ok so i took another go at it tonight. and failed again. This time around i had the PPPoE username and password. What i did was set my modem/Router into bridge mode. Went over to the R1 and turned on the PPPoE and dropped in the user name and pass. I unplugged both the R1 and modem. Put the cable into the WAN port on my moden and then put the other end into the PoE port on the duma (it was already in there). Result failure.... Overall the steps seem straight forward. I plan to have anoher go at it tomorrow but i will do ti without the duma and use a different router to see if i can get that to work at least. I poked around the forums and it seems there are a few people struggling to get the duma to work with PPPoE. Try putting the Netduma WAN IP into the DMZ on the Sagem, and also disable UPnP and any port forwarding on it and also disable its WiFi. That way everything will be controlled by the Netduma. Let us know how that works out for you Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
shogun6x Posted June 9, 2017 Author Share Posted June 9, 2017 Question on this first part. "Try putting the Netduma WAN IP into the DMZ on the Sagem" I cant set a static wan ip on the duma in the settings - WAN -WAN IP when i have the PPPoE enabled. I can put the 192.168.88.1 ip that the duma is set to into the DMZ on the bridged modem/router (segem). I did turn off wifi on the bridged router. I will try it again with the UPnP disabled and port forwarding off but i thought by putting it into bridge mode with would just disable all of these features automatically. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
shogun6x Posted June 9, 2017 Author Share Posted June 9, 2017 After a long call with the ISP and a new modem we are up and running. Upload buffer bloat is still terrible 4000ms but that topic is for another thread. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Netduma Staff Netduma Jack Posted June 9, 2017 Netduma Staff Share Posted June 9, 2017 After a long call with the ISP and a new modem we are up and running. Upload buffer bloat is still terrible 4000ms but that topic is for another thread. Well I'm glad replacing the modem has worked out for you; it seems the other modem was being pretty difficult. I'll look out for your next thread, but for now you could always try out these settings: - 1000km Distance - 0 Ping Assist - Strict Mode On - If less than 50mbps, Pre-emptive Algorithm. If more, Reactive Algorithm - 70% anti-flood - Put your device in Hyper Traffic (in Congestion Control) - Share excess enabled - Reset device prioritisation & apply - Enable UPnP and remove any Port Forwarding rules - Disable deep packet in misc - Enable turbo mode if over 120mbps - Enable super turbo mode if over 300mbps Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Archived
This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.