D-Link DIR-850L QoS not workingHow to configure QoS on home routerDoes disabling QoS result in more...

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D-Link DIR-850L QoS not working


How to configure QoS on home routerDoes disabling QoS result in more bandwidth?D-Link DIR-652 wireless not workingQoS for variable bandwidth connectionsQoS or something else?QOS on Linksys E900Why does router need to know bandwidth when setting up QoS?D-Link DIR-600M - Setting up QoS Rules to restrict bandwidth for given IP addressDD-WRT QoS not working on LAN/WLAN interfaceUnable to understand D-Link “IP QoS” / “QoS Traffic Shaping” fields













0















Quality of Service is not working on my router.



My seedbox (Xios) is set to the lowest priority and does not get throttled as it should when any of the higher priority devices require more bandwidth, resulting in much higher latency in games.



I have tried various uplink and downlink speeds, and both queue types to no avail.



Is this a poor implementation on behalf of my router or am I misunderstanding QoS? I would like take advantage of my available bandwidth with my seedbox when the network is more vacant.



All of my IPs are statically served via DHCP and are within the correct ranges.



enter image description here










share|improve this question
















bumped to the homepage by Community 1 hour ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
















  • The "Application Port" under the "Classification Rules" - I guess this is an arbitrary text box where you can type in custom or preset rule definitions? What is in your "ALL" definition?

    – Kinnectus
    Aug 25 '15 at 6:45











  • That is the default setting. I want the entire system throttled, not just p2p.

    – Christopher Markieta
    Aug 25 '15 at 7:25











  • I have tried specifying the port for Transmission and lowering my uplink, but it still doesn't seem to work.

    – Christopher Markieta
    Aug 26 '15 at 1:40











  • You may want to consider backing up the configuration and factory resetting the router and try the QoS settings from a clean slate...

    – Kinnectus
    Aug 26 '15 at 7:26
















0















Quality of Service is not working on my router.



My seedbox (Xios) is set to the lowest priority and does not get throttled as it should when any of the higher priority devices require more bandwidth, resulting in much higher latency in games.



I have tried various uplink and downlink speeds, and both queue types to no avail.



Is this a poor implementation on behalf of my router or am I misunderstanding QoS? I would like take advantage of my available bandwidth with my seedbox when the network is more vacant.



All of my IPs are statically served via DHCP and are within the correct ranges.



enter image description here










share|improve this question
















bumped to the homepage by Community 1 hour ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
















  • The "Application Port" under the "Classification Rules" - I guess this is an arbitrary text box where you can type in custom or preset rule definitions? What is in your "ALL" definition?

    – Kinnectus
    Aug 25 '15 at 6:45











  • That is the default setting. I want the entire system throttled, not just p2p.

    – Christopher Markieta
    Aug 25 '15 at 7:25











  • I have tried specifying the port for Transmission and lowering my uplink, but it still doesn't seem to work.

    – Christopher Markieta
    Aug 26 '15 at 1:40











  • You may want to consider backing up the configuration and factory resetting the router and try the QoS settings from a clean slate...

    – Kinnectus
    Aug 26 '15 at 7:26














0












0








0








Quality of Service is not working on my router.



My seedbox (Xios) is set to the lowest priority and does not get throttled as it should when any of the higher priority devices require more bandwidth, resulting in much higher latency in games.



I have tried various uplink and downlink speeds, and both queue types to no avail.



Is this a poor implementation on behalf of my router or am I misunderstanding QoS? I would like take advantage of my available bandwidth with my seedbox when the network is more vacant.



All of my IPs are statically served via DHCP and are within the correct ranges.



enter image description here










share|improve this question
















Quality of Service is not working on my router.



My seedbox (Xios) is set to the lowest priority and does not get throttled as it should when any of the higher priority devices require more bandwidth, resulting in much higher latency in games.



I have tried various uplink and downlink speeds, and both queue types to no avail.



Is this a poor implementation on behalf of my router or am I misunderstanding QoS? I would like take advantage of my available bandwidth with my seedbox when the network is more vacant.



All of my IPs are statically served via DHCP and are within the correct ranges.



enter image description here







router bandwidth latency qos






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jul 28 '16 at 8:45









Hennes

59.3k793142




59.3k793142










asked Aug 25 '15 at 5:35









Christopher MarkietaChristopher Markieta

196318




196318





bumped to the homepage by Community 1 hour ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.







bumped to the homepage by Community 1 hour ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.















  • The "Application Port" under the "Classification Rules" - I guess this is an arbitrary text box where you can type in custom or preset rule definitions? What is in your "ALL" definition?

    – Kinnectus
    Aug 25 '15 at 6:45











  • That is the default setting. I want the entire system throttled, not just p2p.

    – Christopher Markieta
    Aug 25 '15 at 7:25











  • I have tried specifying the port for Transmission and lowering my uplink, but it still doesn't seem to work.

    – Christopher Markieta
    Aug 26 '15 at 1:40











  • You may want to consider backing up the configuration and factory resetting the router and try the QoS settings from a clean slate...

    – Kinnectus
    Aug 26 '15 at 7:26



















  • The "Application Port" under the "Classification Rules" - I guess this is an arbitrary text box where you can type in custom or preset rule definitions? What is in your "ALL" definition?

    – Kinnectus
    Aug 25 '15 at 6:45











  • That is the default setting. I want the entire system throttled, not just p2p.

    – Christopher Markieta
    Aug 25 '15 at 7:25











  • I have tried specifying the port for Transmission and lowering my uplink, but it still doesn't seem to work.

    – Christopher Markieta
    Aug 26 '15 at 1:40











  • You may want to consider backing up the configuration and factory resetting the router and try the QoS settings from a clean slate...

    – Kinnectus
    Aug 26 '15 at 7:26

















The "Application Port" under the "Classification Rules" - I guess this is an arbitrary text box where you can type in custom or preset rule definitions? What is in your "ALL" definition?

– Kinnectus
Aug 25 '15 at 6:45





The "Application Port" under the "Classification Rules" - I guess this is an arbitrary text box where you can type in custom or preset rule definitions? What is in your "ALL" definition?

– Kinnectus
Aug 25 '15 at 6:45













That is the default setting. I want the entire system throttled, not just p2p.

– Christopher Markieta
Aug 25 '15 at 7:25





That is the default setting. I want the entire system throttled, not just p2p.

– Christopher Markieta
Aug 25 '15 at 7:25













I have tried specifying the port for Transmission and lowering my uplink, but it still doesn't seem to work.

– Christopher Markieta
Aug 26 '15 at 1:40





I have tried specifying the port for Transmission and lowering my uplink, but it still doesn't seem to work.

– Christopher Markieta
Aug 26 '15 at 1:40













You may want to consider backing up the configuration and factory resetting the router and try the QoS settings from a clean slate...

– Kinnectus
Aug 26 '15 at 7:26





You may want to consider backing up the configuration and factory resetting the router and try the QoS settings from a clean slate...

– Kinnectus
Aug 26 '15 at 7:26










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0














I will try to help. Before we start I want to apologize for my bad English. What are your speeds?



You should run speedtest with your computer connected directly to your modem at different times of the day. You should take note of the lowest ever values of speeds that you get. you should then use 85% of those values. This is important. Don't use your whole bandwidth as it will break QoS. Read this thread on the subject: http://www.linksysinfo.org/index.php?threads/using-qos-tutorial-and-discussion.28349/



To sum it up, this is not real QoS. It's traffic shaping and you are doing it only at your end. Since you have limited control of your bandwidth, you must make sure no traffic ever gets queued at your ISP. The moment a queue is formed there, your ping will sky rocket.



The other issue is that Dlink QoS does not have default rules. This means that all devices must be in a rule somewhere. If you just set your seedbox to low priority it will not work. You must set some priority to all other devices in your network.



Are you on the latest firmware available? Check to see if there are any updates on the Dlink website.



Try these tips and get back to me if that doesn't work.



Edit: Looking at the image you poted, I think you should use Weighted Fair Queue instead of strict priority. I'm pretty certain it uses HTB under the hood.






share|improve this answer
























  • I'm actually thinking about buying this router, but will only do so if the QoS is reliable. There a lot of router reviews on the Web but no one reviews QoS.

    – user1529934
    Nov 23 '15 at 19:34











  • With speed test I got around 20-25 Mbps and tried a variety of combinations and none of them did the trick. I only needed QoS to manage uploads (non-ISP side) and that wasn't working at all. I have updated to the latest firmware. I was trying both Strict Priority and Weighted Fair Queues. This router is great if you don't need QoS! If you want QoS, I highly recommend looking for a dd-wrt (dd-wrt.com/wiki/index.php/Supported_Devices) and/or Tomato (tomato.groov.pl/?page_id=69) supported router since they seem to do a good job at supporting QoS.

    – Christopher Markieta
    Nov 23 '15 at 19:47











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









0














I will try to help. Before we start I want to apologize for my bad English. What are your speeds?



You should run speedtest with your computer connected directly to your modem at different times of the day. You should take note of the lowest ever values of speeds that you get. you should then use 85% of those values. This is important. Don't use your whole bandwidth as it will break QoS. Read this thread on the subject: http://www.linksysinfo.org/index.php?threads/using-qos-tutorial-and-discussion.28349/



To sum it up, this is not real QoS. It's traffic shaping and you are doing it only at your end. Since you have limited control of your bandwidth, you must make sure no traffic ever gets queued at your ISP. The moment a queue is formed there, your ping will sky rocket.



The other issue is that Dlink QoS does not have default rules. This means that all devices must be in a rule somewhere. If you just set your seedbox to low priority it will not work. You must set some priority to all other devices in your network.



Are you on the latest firmware available? Check to see if there are any updates on the Dlink website.



Try these tips and get back to me if that doesn't work.



Edit: Looking at the image you poted, I think you should use Weighted Fair Queue instead of strict priority. I'm pretty certain it uses HTB under the hood.






share|improve this answer
























  • I'm actually thinking about buying this router, but will only do so if the QoS is reliable. There a lot of router reviews on the Web but no one reviews QoS.

    – user1529934
    Nov 23 '15 at 19:34











  • With speed test I got around 20-25 Mbps and tried a variety of combinations and none of them did the trick. I only needed QoS to manage uploads (non-ISP side) and that wasn't working at all. I have updated to the latest firmware. I was trying both Strict Priority and Weighted Fair Queues. This router is great if you don't need QoS! If you want QoS, I highly recommend looking for a dd-wrt (dd-wrt.com/wiki/index.php/Supported_Devices) and/or Tomato (tomato.groov.pl/?page_id=69) supported router since they seem to do a good job at supporting QoS.

    – Christopher Markieta
    Nov 23 '15 at 19:47
















0














I will try to help. Before we start I want to apologize for my bad English. What are your speeds?



You should run speedtest with your computer connected directly to your modem at different times of the day. You should take note of the lowest ever values of speeds that you get. you should then use 85% of those values. This is important. Don't use your whole bandwidth as it will break QoS. Read this thread on the subject: http://www.linksysinfo.org/index.php?threads/using-qos-tutorial-and-discussion.28349/



To sum it up, this is not real QoS. It's traffic shaping and you are doing it only at your end. Since you have limited control of your bandwidth, you must make sure no traffic ever gets queued at your ISP. The moment a queue is formed there, your ping will sky rocket.



The other issue is that Dlink QoS does not have default rules. This means that all devices must be in a rule somewhere. If you just set your seedbox to low priority it will not work. You must set some priority to all other devices in your network.



Are you on the latest firmware available? Check to see if there are any updates on the Dlink website.



Try these tips and get back to me if that doesn't work.



Edit: Looking at the image you poted, I think you should use Weighted Fair Queue instead of strict priority. I'm pretty certain it uses HTB under the hood.






share|improve this answer
























  • I'm actually thinking about buying this router, but will only do so if the QoS is reliable. There a lot of router reviews on the Web but no one reviews QoS.

    – user1529934
    Nov 23 '15 at 19:34











  • With speed test I got around 20-25 Mbps and tried a variety of combinations and none of them did the trick. I only needed QoS to manage uploads (non-ISP side) and that wasn't working at all. I have updated to the latest firmware. I was trying both Strict Priority and Weighted Fair Queues. This router is great if you don't need QoS! If you want QoS, I highly recommend looking for a dd-wrt (dd-wrt.com/wiki/index.php/Supported_Devices) and/or Tomato (tomato.groov.pl/?page_id=69) supported router since they seem to do a good job at supporting QoS.

    – Christopher Markieta
    Nov 23 '15 at 19:47














0












0








0







I will try to help. Before we start I want to apologize for my bad English. What are your speeds?



You should run speedtest with your computer connected directly to your modem at different times of the day. You should take note of the lowest ever values of speeds that you get. you should then use 85% of those values. This is important. Don't use your whole bandwidth as it will break QoS. Read this thread on the subject: http://www.linksysinfo.org/index.php?threads/using-qos-tutorial-and-discussion.28349/



To sum it up, this is not real QoS. It's traffic shaping and you are doing it only at your end. Since you have limited control of your bandwidth, you must make sure no traffic ever gets queued at your ISP. The moment a queue is formed there, your ping will sky rocket.



The other issue is that Dlink QoS does not have default rules. This means that all devices must be in a rule somewhere. If you just set your seedbox to low priority it will not work. You must set some priority to all other devices in your network.



Are you on the latest firmware available? Check to see if there are any updates on the Dlink website.



Try these tips and get back to me if that doesn't work.



Edit: Looking at the image you poted, I think you should use Weighted Fair Queue instead of strict priority. I'm pretty certain it uses HTB under the hood.






share|improve this answer













I will try to help. Before we start I want to apologize for my bad English. What are your speeds?



You should run speedtest with your computer connected directly to your modem at different times of the day. You should take note of the lowest ever values of speeds that you get. you should then use 85% of those values. This is important. Don't use your whole bandwidth as it will break QoS. Read this thread on the subject: http://www.linksysinfo.org/index.php?threads/using-qos-tutorial-and-discussion.28349/



To sum it up, this is not real QoS. It's traffic shaping and you are doing it only at your end. Since you have limited control of your bandwidth, you must make sure no traffic ever gets queued at your ISP. The moment a queue is formed there, your ping will sky rocket.



The other issue is that Dlink QoS does not have default rules. This means that all devices must be in a rule somewhere. If you just set your seedbox to low priority it will not work. You must set some priority to all other devices in your network.



Are you on the latest firmware available? Check to see if there are any updates on the Dlink website.



Try these tips and get back to me if that doesn't work.



Edit: Looking at the image you poted, I think you should use Weighted Fair Queue instead of strict priority. I'm pretty certain it uses HTB under the hood.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 23 '15 at 19:29









user1529934user1529934

1




1













  • I'm actually thinking about buying this router, but will only do so if the QoS is reliable. There a lot of router reviews on the Web but no one reviews QoS.

    – user1529934
    Nov 23 '15 at 19:34











  • With speed test I got around 20-25 Mbps and tried a variety of combinations and none of them did the trick. I only needed QoS to manage uploads (non-ISP side) and that wasn't working at all. I have updated to the latest firmware. I was trying both Strict Priority and Weighted Fair Queues. This router is great if you don't need QoS! If you want QoS, I highly recommend looking for a dd-wrt (dd-wrt.com/wiki/index.php/Supported_Devices) and/or Tomato (tomato.groov.pl/?page_id=69) supported router since they seem to do a good job at supporting QoS.

    – Christopher Markieta
    Nov 23 '15 at 19:47



















  • I'm actually thinking about buying this router, but will only do so if the QoS is reliable. There a lot of router reviews on the Web but no one reviews QoS.

    – user1529934
    Nov 23 '15 at 19:34











  • With speed test I got around 20-25 Mbps and tried a variety of combinations and none of them did the trick. I only needed QoS to manage uploads (non-ISP side) and that wasn't working at all. I have updated to the latest firmware. I was trying both Strict Priority and Weighted Fair Queues. This router is great if you don't need QoS! If you want QoS, I highly recommend looking for a dd-wrt (dd-wrt.com/wiki/index.php/Supported_Devices) and/or Tomato (tomato.groov.pl/?page_id=69) supported router since they seem to do a good job at supporting QoS.

    – Christopher Markieta
    Nov 23 '15 at 19:47

















I'm actually thinking about buying this router, but will only do so if the QoS is reliable. There a lot of router reviews on the Web but no one reviews QoS.

– user1529934
Nov 23 '15 at 19:34





I'm actually thinking about buying this router, but will only do so if the QoS is reliable. There a lot of router reviews on the Web but no one reviews QoS.

– user1529934
Nov 23 '15 at 19:34













With speed test I got around 20-25 Mbps and tried a variety of combinations and none of them did the trick. I only needed QoS to manage uploads (non-ISP side) and that wasn't working at all. I have updated to the latest firmware. I was trying both Strict Priority and Weighted Fair Queues. This router is great if you don't need QoS! If you want QoS, I highly recommend looking for a dd-wrt (dd-wrt.com/wiki/index.php/Supported_Devices) and/or Tomato (tomato.groov.pl/?page_id=69) supported router since they seem to do a good job at supporting QoS.

– Christopher Markieta
Nov 23 '15 at 19:47





With speed test I got around 20-25 Mbps and tried a variety of combinations and none of them did the trick. I only needed QoS to manage uploads (non-ISP side) and that wasn't working at all. I have updated to the latest firmware. I was trying both Strict Priority and Weighted Fair Queues. This router is great if you don't need QoS! If you want QoS, I highly recommend looking for a dd-wrt (dd-wrt.com/wiki/index.php/Supported_Devices) and/or Tomato (tomato.groov.pl/?page_id=69) supported router since they seem to do a good job at supporting QoS.

– Christopher Markieta
Nov 23 '15 at 19:47


















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