Router problems
Router problems
I have a D-Link DI-524C router and my download speed has been hurt massively by it. My dl speed has been recently upped from 6.5mbps to 10mbps and without the router I dl at about 1.15mb/s, but with it I dl at 100-500kb/s, so theres a problem with it. I have the latest router firmware and my computer is in the DMZ. No spyware or anything on my comp... The router is set to 100mbps and is connected by a wire to my comp. It associates the IP by DHCP. Any ideas?
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Re: Router problems
riddla wrote:another comedy gold momentToxicBug wrote:my computer is in the DMZ.

Toxic, get your computer out of DMZ... NOW
you shouldn't be running in DMZ under any circumstances.
No, I don't follow your reasoning:
1. If he's in the DMZ then his router is forwarding all the ports he needs.
2. If he's tested without the router that rules out his PC configuration.
I don't have a lead on what could be causing his problem, but that shouldn't prevent me trying to steer the conversation away from needless flames over something irrelevant and back to the matter at hand.
1. If he's in the DMZ then his router is forwarding all the ports he needs.
2. If he's tested without the router that rules out his PC configuration.
I don't have a lead on what could be causing his problem, but that shouldn't prevent me trying to steer the conversation away from needless flames over something irrelevant and back to the matter at hand.
So what you're saying is that a DMZ is functionless and you have no idea why manufacturers include it?
I mean, surely you understand the function of it and why it's there, so unless there's some magical reason TB wouldn't want to take advantage of those reasons, I still have absolutely no idea why you chose to single out such a completely irrelevant and unremarkable piece of information and try and use it as a tool of ridicule.
Much less why you chose to do that in T&T.
I mean, surely you understand the function of it and why it's there, so unless there's some magical reason TB wouldn't want to take advantage of those reasons, I still have absolutely no idea why you chose to single out such a completely irrelevant and unremarkable piece of information and try and use it as a tool of ridicule.
Much less why you chose to do that in T&T.
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without: 1000kb/sTormentius wrote:What were the results of the download test without the router? And with? Test both and post your results.ToxicBug wrote:So does anyone know what might be causing the problem? I called D-Link tech support today and the tech guy couldn't help me, so a higher level tech will call me tomorrow.
with: 350kb/s
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Like I've already posted, I'm doing a speed test here to check my connection: http://testvitesse.videotron.ca/PieceMaker wrote:What exactly are you downloading? What file? Are you using some p2p program?ToxicBug wrote:without: 1000kb/sTormentius wrote: What were the results of the download test without the router? And with? Test both and post your results.
with: 350kb/s
Can this problem be repeated with any file downloaded off the internet?
As for Foo and the comments he has some validity to the jumping on ToxicBug just because.
BUT I saw the very same thing in the Q4 forum with the script thread
that you yourself, Foo, Jumped in and had your fun.
No matter how little an interaction you had in that nologic fun you did
the very same thing you're bitching about here. Period.
ToxicBug I hope you've heard something helpful from D-Link?
its 11:37 and the d-link person tech was supposed to call me at 11...
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Ok. Missed that . Was going thru the posts and figured you wereToxicBug wrote:Like I've already posted, I'm doing a speed test here to check my connection: http://testvitesse.videotron.ca/
its 11:37 and the d-link person tech was supposed to call me at 11...
just complaining about a lower download speed even though your ISP upped the speed.
Good luck on that tech guy calling on time though. Give him another 2 hours or so. LoL!
Anyways. Good luck on this.
DMZ is nice.. simply because some routers only allow 10 ports to be forwarded..riddla wrote:No soho router ever made should fit this description, otherwise it has serious probems. Perhaps it needs a re-flashing of the firmware and then needs to be properly configured with the pc out of the DMZ and behind NAT where it truly belongs.^misantropia^ wrote:It is if you have a router that can't deal with high volume traffic / lots of connections, randomly reassigns ports, etc.riddla wrote:foo, running in the dmz is 100% unnecessary with any router capable of NAT / port forwarding.
Long story short - set up the router as it states in the instruction book, then give your machine a static IP in the same subnet after all is said and done. Then you can do proper port forwarding to that static IP. A client IP reservation by mac address works too if your router supports it. The goal for port forwarding is to always have the same IP address on the machine being forwarded to.
Again, you might as well ditch the router altogether if you insist on using the DMZ feature with your lone workstation. DMZ is meant mainly for security-hardened systems, i.e. dedicated FTP and email servers which typically need to have a range of random ports to work with.

Not useless :P
[size=75][i]I once had a glass of milk.
It curdled, and then I couldn't drink it. So I mixed it with some water, and it was alright again.
I am now sick.
[/i][/size]
[img]http://img162.imageshack.us/img162/3631/171164665735hk8.png[/img]
It curdled, and then I couldn't drink it. So I mixed it with some water, and it was alright again.
I am now sick.
[/i][/size]
[img]http://img162.imageshack.us/img162/3631/171164665735hk8.png[/img]
Did you try replacing the cables at all? You could have a bad CAT5/6 cable which is causing poor performance.
The fact of the matter is he has a 10mbps connection and any ethernet port can handle that speed easily. If he's having performance problems, I'd check cabling first, and then try to tweak the MTU settings. If that doesn't work, I'd buy a new router and test it. If it works, you had a bad router.
On the topic of the DMZ, it is bad practice to use it because it leaves you 100% open to being vulnerable since every port is open on your machine. It totally circumvents the entire idea behind having a hardware firewall.
The fact of the matter is he has a 10mbps connection and any ethernet port can handle that speed easily. If he's having performance problems, I'd check cabling first, and then try to tweak the MTU settings. If that doesn't work, I'd buy a new router and test it. If it works, you had a bad router.
On the topic of the DMZ, it is bad practice to use it because it leaves you 100% open to being vulnerable since every port is open on your machine. It totally circumvents the entire idea behind having a hardware firewall.
Some people dont have a router to act as a firewall.. they have it to split there internet and nothing more.. :Praw wrote:
On the topic of the DMZ, it is bad practice to use it because it leaves you 100% open to being vulnerable since every port is open on your machine. It totally circumvents the entire idea behind having a hardware firewall.
[size=75][i]I once had a glass of milk.
It curdled, and then I couldn't drink it. So I mixed it with some water, and it was alright again.
I am now sick.
[/i][/size]
[img]http://img162.imageshack.us/img162/3631/171164665735hk8.png[/img]
It curdled, and then I couldn't drink it. So I mixed it with some water, and it was alright again.
I am now sick.
[/i][/size]
[img]http://img162.imageshack.us/img162/3631/171164665735hk8.png[/img]
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becoz they b dumSOAPboy wrote:Some people dont have a router to act as a firewall.. they have it to split there internet and nothing more.. :Praw wrote:
On the topic of the DMZ, it is bad practice to use it because it leaves you 100% open to being vulnerable since every port is open on your machine. It totally circumvents the entire idea behind having a hardware firewall.
DMZing a PC is fine as long as it has a solid software firewall on it.
On the subject of poor speeds due to CAT5, I used a RJ45 cable that just had the 8 wires flat in the sleeve, didnt get over 10kB/s download with that. Switched to twisted pair, and got full 300kB/s.
Amazing how much crosstalk can hamper speeds.
On the subject of poor speeds due to CAT5, I used a RJ45 cable that just had the 8 wires flat in the sleeve, didnt get over 10kB/s download with that. Switched to twisted pair, and got full 300kB/s.
Amazing how much crosstalk can hamper speeds.
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- Joined: Sat Dec 14, 2002 8:00 am
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- Posts: 22175
- Joined: Sun Oct 14, 2001 7:00 am