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Peter,
please turn off your 'Read recipt requested' for your emails to the
list.
I had
a similar loss per hop when I first started. It ended up being the routers I
used. I used a few linksys BEFSR41 4 port cable/dsl routers at two towers. They
worked fine in gateway mode, however I had a 200Kb drop in throughput at each
tower. After changing them to router mode and adding a few static routes, I no
longer have any lag even after 3 hops.
internet--router--AP- - - - - -AP---router---AP- - - - -
-AP---router---AP- - - - - -Client
One
other thing that gets a few people, double check your 'basic rates' and 'auto
fall back' from a computer connected to the device instead of over the network.
There has been problems reported in the past when someone changed the setting
remotely (From Chris I think. Right?). Everything looked right from the NOC
using simpleNMS but it was found that the clients computer using simpleMonitor
showed it still set at 1MB. If all else fails, set the radios to a fixed 1 or
2MB with no fall back. Also make sure that the AP (the one acting as an AP) is
set to recieve all rates (check mark in all boxes).
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Peter Cartwright Sent: Wednesday, July 16, 2003 3:45 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: [smartBridges] Bandwidth Throughput Tom,
Thanks
for the feedback.
Default gateway ok, primary ports ok, all units on same subnet, APt's
both at least 12' above ground, all units mounted on
poles...
To be
honest, I don't think it's a ping thing since the pings I get are very good
between the units (generally 1 to 2mS per hop).
Also,
no sign of errors etc in the SB monitor stats.
The
info I posted was the closest we have got yet to a structured test, though we
have seen similar things in another area where we have units (small urban town)
where the distances tend to be a few hundred metres using roof top
aerials. The effect seems constant across a variety of installations which
is what has me puzzled. Prior to taking up with SB we used DLink 900AP+
units at both ends and had noticed similar effects.
I find
it all quite worrying since I had expected our bottleneck to be our 2Mbps
backhaul pipe and not the 11Mbps 802.11b network!
Since
we are in blighty, we tend to mount our aerials a few feet above roof height and
not on towers (would be next to impossible to get permission and even if we did
the money we would need to pay landowners etc would destroy the business
model).
Putting science to one side, it "feels" like there is something happening
when the packets hit the 802.11b interfaces such that throughput decreases
significantly at each hop. I had wondered if it might be hidden node
effects, but switching on RTS/CTS (default is off) has not seemed to make any
difference.
Peter
Loop Scorpio Ltd
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Title: Message
- [smartBridges] Bandwidth Hog Jeremy Oswalt
- [smartBridges] Bandwidth Throughput Peter Cartwright
- RE: [smartBridges] Bandwidth Throughput Tom Haynes
- RE: [smartBridges] Bandwidth Throughput Peter Cartwright
- RE: [smartBridges] Bandwidth Throughput Tom Haynes
- RE: [smartBridges] Bandwidth Throug... Peter Cartwright
- Re: [smartBridges] Bandwidth Throughput Ray
- RE: [smartBridges] Bandwidth Hog Kevin Summers
- Re: [smartBridges] Bandwidth Hog Dennis Burgess
- RE: [smartBridges] Bandwidth Hog Kevin Summers
- Re: [smartBridges] Bandwidth Hog Dennis Burgess
- Re: [smartBridges] Bandwidth Hog Eje Gustafsson
- Re: [smartBridges] Bandwidth Hog Ray
- RE: [smartBridges] Bandwidth Hog Kevin Summers
- Re: [smartBridges] Bandwidth Hog Eje Gustafsson
