Do you know what type of traffic it is? Have you checked that allow remote dns requests is unticked? To stop dns amplifications attacks which would match with high upload and a time peeriod for it slow down? Andrew On 14/08/2015 7:53 AM, "Karl Auer" <kauer@nullarbor.com.au> wrote:
On Fri, 2015-08-14 at 07:11 +1000, Ben Jackson wrote:
I really feel this is somehow to do with the DHCP client/server interaction between the two devices. I have even tried running the modem non-bridged so that there is a dual NAT situation which gives me a very similar result.
Similar good or similar bad?
If DHCP is the problem, it can only be that the ISP is throttling the link in the absence of whatever it is the modem does that the MT doesn't. All DHCP does is provide an address to your end, which is still happening. Throttling is usually down to way lower rates than 20Mb/s though.
The obvious thing to try here is a different brand of router. If it's something to do with the router not responding the way the ISP wants, then any router will have the same problem. If some other router works fine, then it's MikroTik-specific,
The most interesting part of all this is the delay. It works well for quite a long time, then suddenly slows down. Then you reboot everything and it's all good for a while, before slowing down again. That smells to me of something filling up or running out. Is the time from reboot to failure constant?
Regards, K.
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Karl Auer (kauer@nullarbor.com.au) work +61 2 64957435 http://www.nullarbor.com.au mobile +61 428 957160
GPG fingerprint: 9DCA 0903 BCBD 0647 BCCC 2FA7 A35C 57A1 ACF9 00BB Old fingerprint: 231A B066 CF91 1216 4F0F F2AC CE25 B8AA 46DC CC4F
_______________________________________________ Public mailing list Public@talk.mikrotik.com.au http://talk.mikrotik.com.au/mailman/listinfo/public_talk.mikrotik.com.au