My D-Link's Ethernet bridge downlink just got 10-30x slower?
- by Jay Levitt
TL;DR: I unplugged my network to move my desk, and now downloading via my DIR-655's Ethernet LAN bridge is 10-30x slower than the Ethernet switch it's plugged into.
Background
My network is
SMC cable modem <-> Cisco firewall <-> Netgear switch <-> D-Link WiFi†
| | | |
SMC8014 ASA-5505 GS608v2 gigE DIR-655 rev A3 gigE
†The DIR-655 is used as an access point, not a router (although what
D-Link calls an access point, I'd call a bridge). The "WAN" port is
unused; the Netgear connects to the built-in 4-port Ethernet LAN
switch, inside the built- in router/firewall.
Endpoints:
MacBook Pro 17" mid-2010
iPhone 4S
Fedora 12 Linux server running reasonably fast dual-Athlon X2, VelociRaptors, etc.
All cables are <10 feet, mostly CAT-5e, some CAT-6, all premade. All WiFi endpoints are within three feet of the D-Link.
Yesterday I unplugged and rearranged stuff, and now connecting via the D-Link - even through the wired switch, right next to the incoming network cable - is 30x slower than connecting directly to the Netgear switch, on both my MacBook and iPhone.
How I'm measuring "slower"
I'm mostly using http://speedtest.net, which of course only really measures broadband speeds. I've also installed http://www.speedtest.net/mini.php on my local server, but can't test the iPhone with that.
Results
Speedtest.net, closest server over Comcast business-class:
CONFIG | PING (ms) | DOWN (Mbps) | UP (Mbps)
Mac <-> Ethernet <-> Netgear | 9 | 31.6 | 6.8
Mac <-> Ethernet <-> D-Link | 8 | 4.1 | 6.0
Mac <-> WiFi <-> D-Link | 9 | 1.4 | 2.9
iPhone <-> WiFi <-> D-Link | 67 | 0.4 | 1.6
Speedtest Mini on Linux PC:
CONFIG | DOWN (Mbps) | UP (Mbps)
Mac <-> Ethernet <-> NetGear | 97.2 | 76.9
Mac <-> Ethernet <-> D-Link | 8.2 | 24.2
Mac <-> WiFi <-> D-Link | 1.0 | 8.6
Slow typing in SSH:
Mac <-> Ethernet <-> Netgear <-> Linux PC: smooth
Mac <-> Ethernet <-> D-Link <-> Linux PC: choppy
Note that D-Link upload speeds are normal on broadband, slower locally (but I'd believe that's a D-Link limitation), and always faster than the downloads! Since ssh is choppy just with slow typing, I don't believe it's a throttling-type problem either; that's not a lot of bandwidth.
What I've tried
Swapping all "good" and "bad" cables
Re-plugging "bad" cable from D-Link to Netgear and watching it be the "good" cable
pulling cables away from power lines
Verify that the Mac auto-detects the D-Link as gigE
Try to verify the link speed of the D-Link <- Netgear connection, but the firmware doesn't report that
Verify that the D-Link sees no TX/RX errors or collisions
Use different Ethernet ports on both Netgear and D-Link
Reset the D-Link to factory settings
Upgrade the D-Link firmware from 1.21 to 1.35NA, 2010/11/12, the latest
Reboot everything at least once
On the Mac, disable Wi-Fi during the Ethernet tests, and unplug Ethernet during the Wi-Fi tests
Using iStumbler, verify that the D-Link isn't picking overloaded Wi-Fi channels (usually just 1-5 neighbors on my and adjacent channels, average for my apt building)
Verify that the only client connected to the Wi-Fi was the iPhone
Verify that nothing was being chatty on my network according to the WISH log
Enable and disable all sorts of D-Link settings, including forcing WAN auto-detect to gigE
So.
I don't mind buying a new access point—I wouldn't mind having a dual-link network—but as a guy who's been networking since gated v4 was a drastic rewrite, and who often used physical sniffers in the days before Wireshark, I'm baffled. I hate being baffled.
What could I possibly have changed that would result in this? How can I measure it? All I can think of is a static zap—thick carpet, socks, HVAC—but I didn't feel one, and does that really happen anymore?
Can I test if it's Ethernet vs. TCP layer slowness? I'm not familiar with modern network utilities; it's hard to Google without hitting "Q: Why is my network slow? A: Is your microwave on?"
If I don't get an answer here, will someone big and powerful help me migrate it to serverfault without getting screamed back here? In the words of Inigo Montoya, "I must know." Don't get all Dread Pirate Roberts on me.