![]() ![]() In addition the setup is complicated by the fact that it's LTE. Round robin, where network stream A will be sent to modem #1, and network stream B to modem #2, and so forth.ĭifferent clients go to different devices, e.g. There's generally different ways of doing this:Ī SD-WAN configuration where you have some remote end that merge the two flows, so it will look like one pipe to the outside world. You need a layer three device to aggregate 元 traffic. ![]() When you connect both to your switch, it's basically a round robin selection, where your computer will use either randomly depending on which router was the quickest to answer to your DHCP request. It has zero management features as far as I can tell, and can simply not aggregate bandwidth from two different 元 devices. Your switch is a standard stupid L2 switch. None of the stuff you mention your switch supports is even remotely relevant for aggregation. If you continue to call a router a modem, you'll be going against the entire data-communications industry's naming conventions.You cannot aggregate links in the way you attempt to do. You cannot take a Fios ONT and use it on a modem based network (such as cable systems.) Two very different technologies. You cannot take any device called a modem and use it on fios. They happen to have MoCA bridges in them for the LAN, but these are not modems. This process is quite different than what is used in a modem, thus the different name. The ONT is an optical network terminal that converts between light and electricity. The simple fact is fios does not use modems. Verizon routers contain MoCA bridges that connect the coax LAN to the rest of the LAN. MoCA LAN is quite different than the DOCSIS WAN standard. I will test with WiFi off when I have a chance and post back. Disabling the TCP checksum offload would virtually solve the problem and still allow you to use think it is also a modem as it has a MoCA component along with Ethernet. Disabling IPv6 would not serve you good because the entire point of the recent IPv6 rollout was to allowing customers to use IPv6 to access the part of the Internet that was previously not accessible via IPv4. I can now answer the question about IPv6 to the OP: you can 1) disable IPv6 at router level, 2) disable IPv6 at NIC level, 3) disable IPv6 TCP Checksum Offload (this is the root problem and suggested by Intel in the technical advisory). ![]() ![]() My thought is that companies should put those who actually build the hardware and software in the community for a day or two periodically, so they can know what needs to be fixed and what the customers actually want, instead of being solely guided by the product/sales/marketing teams.ĭexman, sorry I was away and taking a break from work/computer. Well, this also shows communities like this Forum is useful. I tried "Fix Slow Internet" at Support>Fios Internet on Verizon web site, and that seemed to help, but the issue quickly came back.Īny ideas what "Fix Slow Internet" at exactly do, and how can I fix the issue I am having, cause the only option I am left at this point is to switch to another Internet looks like a multi-million dollar corporation left thousands of paying customers with Intel NICs on community support. I called back in and the technician told me she did "something" (she could not explain what exactly) and it looks all good on their side, but I still experience the issue on two different computers, although the Verizon speed test, and show close to Gigabit speeds, and shows some 800Mbps download, but only 3.5Mbps upload speed. Verizon replaced the Fios router, but that did not help. Verizon reset the router to factory defaults, but that did not help. When connected directly without Verizon Fios router, all works fine. The same issue on two different computers. About a week ago the web pages started to load slowly or partially, and Verizon speed test failed on router test most of the time, or I would get weird speed results when connected trough Verizon Fios router. ![]()
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