Help me make my network recover better from ISP dropouts
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My ISP drops out once or twice a week. Much of it due to local construction, I believe.
Anyhow, after the modem comes back online, some clients recover immediately but others seem to take forever or never recover.
I've found that if I restart my SG-1100 everything comes back up rapidly. But that's inconvenient and impossible if I'm not home.
I did implement the setting to block attempts by the cable modem to assign addresses to clients if the pfSense router loses internet.
Is there a way to force the SG-1100 to immediately cancel and reissue DHCP licenses upon regaining WAN connectivity? Or am I barking up the wrong tree with that idea?
The SG-1100 is on the latest firmware revision and works flawlessly, until these internet disruptions occur.
Thanks all.
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@NGUSER6947 Can you give more details on what doesn’t work? Is this an IPv6 problem? IPv4 with NAT shouldn’t be an issue because that’s all internal to the LAN.
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@SteveITS Well, some clients seem to come back up very quickly and others don't connect.
Which does what seems to be arbitrary. Otherwise, if I restart the SG-1100 everything comes back fine. If I just leave it alone, sometimes one laptop will get online immediately, other times it may not but a different one will recover.
I think IPV6 is a non-issue. I don't think any of my clients are using it
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@NGUSER6947 said in Help me make my network recover better from ISP dropouts:
come back up
What does "come back up" mean, though? Not getting an IP address via DHCP? DNS failing to resolve? Can ping pfSense but not the Internet?
In a normal situation I'd expect everything to immediately start working when the pfSense WAN comes back online. DHCP on LAN should work regardless of the pfSense WAN status.
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Have you tried to set the latency to a different mode?