|
-
Tiger Shark
What causes this??
I've got a pc that is directly connected to a Linksys router and my ISP is Comcast cable. I'm noticing that very often I will attempt to access a website and will only get a message in the bottom left corner of the Mozilla page that says 'Waiting for www.whatever.com', like the page is trying to load but it can't. But if I reclick on the link or the bookmark it will instantly go to the site and load quickly. It's as if I have to 'try' a website 2 or sometimes 3 times before I'm able to connect. I'm wondering if this could somehow be related to the router (even though I'm connected directly to it). Another reason I'm suspecting the router is because on occasion (although it hasn't happened in a while) I have to unplug my router and wait a minute because I lose my connection to the internet altogether and powering down the router (not the modem) solves the issue. Just wondering if a router can go 'bad'.
Thanks for any input!!
Adam
______________
A64 3200+ Venice 2.0GHz
Gigabyte GA-K8N-F nForce4 ATX
2x1GB crucial DDR 400
XFX Geforce 6800GS 256 GDDR3 PCI-Ex16
Enermax EG425P-VE 2.0 420W
WD 80 GB SATA HD
WD 120 GB SATA HD
Creative SB Audigy
Viewonic 21" LCD
Now playing--Strat-o-matic Baseball, DOD, HL2, TF2, COD 2, Sim City4
-
It is often caused by packet loss. If you wait, you'll eventually get a timeout error message.
Last edited by ua549; 11-08-2009 at 07:26 AM.
-
Tiger Shark
Could this be caused by the router?
______________
A64 3200+ Venice 2.0GHz
Gigabyte GA-K8N-F nForce4 ATX
2x1GB crucial DDR 400
XFX Geforce 6800GS 256 GDDR3 PCI-Ex16
Enermax EG425P-VE 2.0 420W
WD 80 GB SATA HD
WD 120 GB SATA HD
Creative SB Audigy
Viewonic 21" LCD
Now playing--Strat-o-matic Baseball, DOD, HL2, TF2, COD 2, Sim City4
-
It can be caused by anything anywhere along the route.
Packets get dropped even on your local lan.
-
Mako Shark
I would suspect the router at this point ...
Compaq A910em: T2330 dual core 1.6Ghz, X3100 384MB GPU, 160GB sata HDD, 2GB RAM
Gaming rig: Asus Striker II, Coolermaster GX 750w, E4600 @ 2.4Ghz, 2.5GB RAM, Zerotherm FZ 120, 9500GT 1GB
Server: Mac mini running W23k Server - 1.8Ghz dual-core, 1GB RAM, 1x80GB, 2x500GB externals + LTO1 tape backup
An important petition, regarding your human rights:
https://www.change.org/en-GB/petitio...r-both-genders
-
Dropped packets are not an indication of a nic hardware failure unless the counts are substantial.
It is simply an indication that there was an issue with a packet at a particular instant and place in time.
This can be from electrical interference, a marginal cable, a collision (rare), a node that is too busy, etc.
Cables and connectors are the cause of most problems on a running network.
To see stats for your NIC - not other nics along a route or your router - open a CMD window and enter netstat -es
Notice the counts of received packets discarded and discarded out packets.
There are other counters of interest such as timeouts and destination unreachable.
Only if there are lots of discards relative to the total number of packets should you be concerned.
Last edited by ua549; 11-08-2009 at 05:12 PM.
-
Mako Shark
No, but he said by rebooting the user it solves the problem at the time.
I have had the same problem with routers before, where they stop/slow http traffic and eventually get so bad you cant connect to them any longer.
Compaq A910em: T2330 dual core 1.6Ghz, X3100 384MB GPU, 160GB sata HDD, 2GB RAM
Gaming rig: Asus Striker II, Coolermaster GX 750w, E4600 @ 2.4Ghz, 2.5GB RAM, Zerotherm FZ 120, 9500GT 1GB
Server: Mac mini running W23k Server - 1.8Ghz dual-core, 1GB RAM, 1x80GB, 2x500GB externals + LTO1 tape backup
An important petition, regarding your human rights:
https://www.change.org/en-GB/petitio...r-both-genders
-
 Originally Posted by wh666-666
No, but he said by rebooting the user it solves the problem at the time.
I have had the same problem with routers before, where they stop/slow http traffic and eventually get so bad you cant connect to them any longer.
The OP also stated that re-clicking the link solves the problem as well. Having a longer delay while attempting to access a site can be an indication of circuit issues along the route especially when the route is lengthy in terms of hops. I've seen a number of message reassembly errors on my servers lately due to what I expect are routing issues.
That said, the problem can be anywhere along the route including the local router.
Last edited by ua549; 11-09-2009 at 10:07 AM.
-
Great White Shark
It's been awhile since I was in a Linksys router, but maybe your router has some logging options? I know an older one I used to have had logging to see the IP addresses of inbound/outbound traffic, so maybe there is one for seeing data information, such as packet loss the router receives.
Prince of the OC Crusaders
Intel i7 3.2GHz @ 4.24GHz
Cooler Master V8
Asus P9X79 Pro
16GB Patriot Viper Extreme DDR3-1600 (quad channel)
HIS R9 290X @1050MHz
Asus 20x DVD-RW DL DVD-RW
-
Catfish
How old is the router? IE how long has it been in service? Also, here's an idea from left field: try a good registry cleaner. When I first switched to broadband a few years ago I couldn't get networking to work on my system at all until I cleaned the registry. Here is what I use: RegSupreme Pro at www.macecraft.com/. Until you get to know it use the more conservative cleaning settings. Always make a backup when prompted by the program in case a mistake is made.
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
|