Routing between wifi and ethernet is extremely slow on home router, The Next CEO of Stack...

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Routing between wifi and ethernet is extremely slow on home router,



The Next CEO of Stack OverflowHome Networking: Connecting a switch to a routerUsing D-Link 2750U WIFI Router for WIFIExtremely slow connection on LAN for Readynas NV+ v2 NASConnection between router and serverWindows 7 professional Networking query using Sky Broadband and NASWired ethernet from wifi, using AP routerNetworking device to broadcast wifi from an ethernet portenable ethernet on ubee routerCan I setup one router (modem) for ethernet internet only and another router for Wifi only on the same network?Home Ethernet - Connecting a second router to extend wifi












1















I have home Zyxel router, that serves as WiFi AP, DHCP server and has Ethernet ports. On one of Ethernet ports I have NAS connected. When I connect my PC to other Ethernet port routing between Ethernet ports works well, but when I connect over WiFi, the WiFi-to-Ethernet routing is extremely slow (like 1kbps). DHCP works well, all devices including NAS get IP address correctly assigned, so I think there is no IP conflict.



Do you have any advice how to configure WiFi-to-Ethernet routing so it works normally? It doesn't matter if I run Windows or Linux or Mac OS on the Wifi connected PC, and it doesn't matter what protocol I use. All are very slow, SMB, AFP, NFS. I also tried to use Raspberry Pi with WiFi and Ethernet and port routing worked well there, but I'd prefer to use the Zyxel router to connect to NAS.










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  • Could be an issue with the wireless RF environment. Download a Wi-Fi analysis app such as WiFiMan from Ubiquiti Networks and look at the channels that are in use.

    – Twisty Impersonator
    3 hours ago











  • Can you run iperf between a wireless device and a LAN Ethernet device (preferably a Mac or PC with gigabit ethernet)? Measuring each direction independently would be helpful. Note that iperf sends from client to server by default.

    – Spiff
    2 hours ago











  • Also, are you routing (ie engaging the CPU to push packets), or bridging (which can be offloaded with a lot less CPU). Routing means that IP addresses are in different ranges, bridging implies IP addresses are in the same range.

    – davidgo
    57 mins ago
















1















I have home Zyxel router, that serves as WiFi AP, DHCP server and has Ethernet ports. On one of Ethernet ports I have NAS connected. When I connect my PC to other Ethernet port routing between Ethernet ports works well, but when I connect over WiFi, the WiFi-to-Ethernet routing is extremely slow (like 1kbps). DHCP works well, all devices including NAS get IP address correctly assigned, so I think there is no IP conflict.



Do you have any advice how to configure WiFi-to-Ethernet routing so it works normally? It doesn't matter if I run Windows or Linux or Mac OS on the Wifi connected PC, and it doesn't matter what protocol I use. All are very slow, SMB, AFP, NFS. I also tried to use Raspberry Pi with WiFi and Ethernet and port routing worked well there, but I'd prefer to use the Zyxel router to connect to NAS.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Jan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • Could be an issue with the wireless RF environment. Download a Wi-Fi analysis app such as WiFiMan from Ubiquiti Networks and look at the channels that are in use.

    – Twisty Impersonator
    3 hours ago











  • Can you run iperf between a wireless device and a LAN Ethernet device (preferably a Mac or PC with gigabit ethernet)? Measuring each direction independently would be helpful. Note that iperf sends from client to server by default.

    – Spiff
    2 hours ago











  • Also, are you routing (ie engaging the CPU to push packets), or bridging (which can be offloaded with a lot less CPU). Routing means that IP addresses are in different ranges, bridging implies IP addresses are in the same range.

    – davidgo
    57 mins ago














1












1








1








I have home Zyxel router, that serves as WiFi AP, DHCP server and has Ethernet ports. On one of Ethernet ports I have NAS connected. When I connect my PC to other Ethernet port routing between Ethernet ports works well, but when I connect over WiFi, the WiFi-to-Ethernet routing is extremely slow (like 1kbps). DHCP works well, all devices including NAS get IP address correctly assigned, so I think there is no IP conflict.



Do you have any advice how to configure WiFi-to-Ethernet routing so it works normally? It doesn't matter if I run Windows or Linux or Mac OS on the Wifi connected PC, and it doesn't matter what protocol I use. All are very slow, SMB, AFP, NFS. I also tried to use Raspberry Pi with WiFi and Ethernet and port routing worked well there, but I'd prefer to use the Zyxel router to connect to NAS.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Jan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I have home Zyxel router, that serves as WiFi AP, DHCP server and has Ethernet ports. On one of Ethernet ports I have NAS connected. When I connect my PC to other Ethernet port routing between Ethernet ports works well, but when I connect over WiFi, the WiFi-to-Ethernet routing is extremely slow (like 1kbps). DHCP works well, all devices including NAS get IP address correctly assigned, so I think there is no IP conflict.



Do you have any advice how to configure WiFi-to-Ethernet routing so it works normally? It doesn't matter if I run Windows or Linux or Mac OS on the Wifi connected PC, and it doesn't matter what protocol I use. All are very slow, SMB, AFP, NFS. I also tried to use Raspberry Pi with WiFi and Ethernet and port routing worked well there, but I'd prefer to use the Zyxel router to connect to NAS.







networking router wireless-router ethernet nas






share|improve this question









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Jan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









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edited 1 hour ago









karel

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asked 4 hours ago









JanJan

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Jan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Jan is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • Could be an issue with the wireless RF environment. Download a Wi-Fi analysis app such as WiFiMan from Ubiquiti Networks and look at the channels that are in use.

    – Twisty Impersonator
    3 hours ago











  • Can you run iperf between a wireless device and a LAN Ethernet device (preferably a Mac or PC with gigabit ethernet)? Measuring each direction independently would be helpful. Note that iperf sends from client to server by default.

    – Spiff
    2 hours ago











  • Also, are you routing (ie engaging the CPU to push packets), or bridging (which can be offloaded with a lot less CPU). Routing means that IP addresses are in different ranges, bridging implies IP addresses are in the same range.

    – davidgo
    57 mins ago



















  • Could be an issue with the wireless RF environment. Download a Wi-Fi analysis app such as WiFiMan from Ubiquiti Networks and look at the channels that are in use.

    – Twisty Impersonator
    3 hours ago











  • Can you run iperf between a wireless device and a LAN Ethernet device (preferably a Mac or PC with gigabit ethernet)? Measuring each direction independently would be helpful. Note that iperf sends from client to server by default.

    – Spiff
    2 hours ago











  • Also, are you routing (ie engaging the CPU to push packets), or bridging (which can be offloaded with a lot less CPU). Routing means that IP addresses are in different ranges, bridging implies IP addresses are in the same range.

    – davidgo
    57 mins ago

















Could be an issue with the wireless RF environment. Download a Wi-Fi analysis app such as WiFiMan from Ubiquiti Networks and look at the channels that are in use.

– Twisty Impersonator
3 hours ago





Could be an issue with the wireless RF environment. Download a Wi-Fi analysis app such as WiFiMan from Ubiquiti Networks and look at the channels that are in use.

– Twisty Impersonator
3 hours ago













Can you run iperf between a wireless device and a LAN Ethernet device (preferably a Mac or PC with gigabit ethernet)? Measuring each direction independently would be helpful. Note that iperf sends from client to server by default.

– Spiff
2 hours ago





Can you run iperf between a wireless device and a LAN Ethernet device (preferably a Mac or PC with gigabit ethernet)? Measuring each direction independently would be helpful. Note that iperf sends from client to server by default.

– Spiff
2 hours ago













Also, are you routing (ie engaging the CPU to push packets), or bridging (which can be offloaded with a lot less CPU). Routing means that IP addresses are in different ranges, bridging implies IP addresses are in the same range.

– davidgo
57 mins ago





Also, are you routing (ie engaging the CPU to push packets), or bridging (which can be offloaded with a lot less CPU). Routing means that IP addresses are in different ranges, bridging implies IP addresses are in the same range.

– davidgo
57 mins ago










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