Random slow internet on all apple devices only
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https://www.google.com/?gws_rd=ssl#q=ios+8+wifi+slow
https://www.google.com/?gws_rd=ssl#q=ios+8+wifi+problemPerhaps you should move your Bitten Fruit issues to more fitting place?
https://www.apple.com/support/contact/
https://discussions.apple.com/welcome -
I looked it up but most of the people in the apple forums posting about their issues knew nothing about networking (probably because they are apple people so dont understand the underlying technology and cannot be bothered too). Anyway I still dont understand why this would happen out of the blue, it even happens on my jailbroken devices. And even more odd is they show fine speedtests just loading anything real world related is very slow or times out.
edit: found this: https://medium.com/@mariociabarra/wifried-ios-8-wifi-performance-issues-3029a164ce94
I installed tweak but unfortunatly it didnt solve anything. -
Did you check your DNS settings.
Sometimes when DNS is misconfigured, it will try the first server, timeout, and then go to the second server on the DNS list. It might be the issue.
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Did you check your DNS settings.
Sometimes when DNS is misconfigured, it will try the first server, timeout, and then go to the second server on the DNS list. It might be the issue.
Yes DNS relay is off and the DNS servers are set for opendns. So primary as 208.67.222.222, secondary is 208.67.220.220. Also nothing pfsense has changed for this to occur so I'm puzzled.
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Just for kicks, change the DNS servers on one Apple device to Google's at 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4. See if that makes a difference.
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Just for kicks, change the DNS servers on one Apple device to Google's at 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4. See if that makes a difference.
Tried it even though I hate Google dns. Unfortunately didn't help anything.
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Could be something IPv6-related if it's not all set up properly but the devices think IPv6 should be available for some reason.
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(probably because they are apple people so dont understand the underlying technology and cannot be bothered too)
Prejudice and stereotyping, on any basis, is never appropriate.
I switched to Apple products after three decades because I do "understand the underlying technology." I was using a Network General Sniffer Network Analyzer years before most people even knew such things existed. I've written real-time, multitasking kernels for embedded systems, including satellite ground support equipment. I've got more electronic test equipment in my home than I could even name.
Some of us became "Apple people" because we tired of creaky, plastic computers built on the cheap running operating systems that were more pasted together than architected.
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Could be something IPv6-related if it's not all set up properly but the devices think IPv6 should be available for some reason.
Ipv6 is disabled.
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Could it be something to do with that Apple IP saving "feature" that makes ARP logs go nuts?
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Could it be something to do with that Apple IP saving "feature" that makes ARP logs go nuts?
Never heard of this, could you explain? Also it seemed to have happened out of the blue really so im not sure why this would only start now. It doesnt seem to be an issue with the AP though, at least in my opinion, since my fire tv and laptop have no issues at all and stream 1080p content flawlessly.
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https://forum.pfsense.org/index.php?topic=93386.msg520015#msg520015
Bonjour Sleep Proxy.
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I run a nearly exclusive Apple network in my office (full disclosure, I am an Apple Consultant), and haven't seen an issue like this. As I mentioned earlier, DNS is usually the culprit when the network slows down, but you've checked that already.
I assume you've rebooted every device on the network–from the ISP gear out to the end-user devices. I have one of the new Airport Extremes, and I think it has some issues. It has slowed to a crawl a couple of times, and a reboot usually resolves the issue. I haven't tried to identify the root cause because it was a 1-2 time issue.
If you hardwire a Mac does the slow network issue persist?
If none of those suggestions help, you'll probably want to put a packet sniffer before and after pfSense to see if that's the issue. I don't know why it would be, but stranger things have happened.
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I run a nearly exclusive Apple network in my office (full disclosure, I am an Apple Consultant), and haven't seen an issue like this. As I mentioned earlier, DNS is usually the culprit when the network slows down, but you've checked that already.
I assume you've rebooted every device on the network–from the ISP gear out to the end-user devices. I have one of the new Airport Extremes, and I think it has some issues. It has slowed to a crawl a couple of times, and a reboot usually resolves the issue. I haven't tried to identify the root cause because it was a 1-2 time issue.
If you hardwire a Mac does the slow network issue persist?
If none of those suggestions help, you'll probably want to put a packet sniffer before and after pfSense to see if that's the issue. I don't know why it would be, but stranger things have happened.
Yes I have tried rebooting everything but it didnt seem to fix anything. I will try hard wiring the mac eventually to see if that at least solves the macs issue but that would require a lot of work moving it, which at the moment i cant do because its not my computer. Anyways that wouldn't really solve the issue at hand since my main concern is for the wifi issues with the numerous apple devices on my network.
Edit: i just did a packet capture with pfsenses gui and it seemed while i was doing the capture my iphones speed was normal. It was loading instagram and everything normally it seemed. But after i stopped the capture it slowed down again.
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Have you tested it on other wireless networks? (friends/McDonalds/Starbucks/Chickfa) How is the performance over the air? How is it slow, as in it starts loading an image and takes a while ("drawing" the image) … or does it take a while to even begin loading, but is fast once it begins? Are they plugged in when you test (something that might trigger a profile/battery-saving change)?
don't trust anything ookla based (speedtest.net etc..).
Has your iOS been updated recently? Do you use any applications on the iDevices like a task manager? How many iDevices have you tried and are they all running the same flavor of iOS?
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@heavy1metal:
Have you tested it on other wireless networks? (friends/McDonalds/Starbucks/Chickfa) How is the performance over the air? How is it slow, as in it starts loading an image and takes a while ("drawing" the image) … or does it take a while to even begin loading, but is fast once it begins? Are they plugged in when you test (something that might trigger a profile/battery-saving change)?
don't trust anything ookla based (speedtest.net etc..).
Has your iOS been updated recently? Do you use any applications on the iDevices like a task manager? How many iDevices have you tried and are they all running the same flavor of iOS?
Yes i have tested on friends networks as well as my guest network and the performance is good. It takes a while to even begin loading. They are not plugged in during testing. Why dont you like ookla tests? IOS has not been updated recently and they are all running ios 8. Dont use any task managers.
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You could try backing up your pfSense settings and resetting it to factory defaults. Quickly get WiFi and the Internet up and running, and see if that improves things. Then you can revert back to your saved settings to get everything back prior to testing.
This is a very odd issue.
Ookla tests are optimized and their testing can be compressed to artificially test bandwidth. Here is a different bandwidth test tool that may provide alternative results.
http://www.dslreports.com/speedtest
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@heavy1metal:
Have you tested it on other wireless networks? (friends/McDonalds/Starbucks/Chickfa) How is the performance over the air? How is it slow, as in it starts loading an image and takes a while ("drawing" the image) … or does it take a while to even begin loading, but is fast once it begins? Are they plugged in when you test (something that might trigger a profile/battery-saving change)?
don't trust anything ookla based (speedtest.net etc..).
Has your iOS been updated recently? Do you use any applications on the iDevices like a task manager? How many iDevices have you tried and are they all running the same flavor of iOS?
Yes i have tested on friends networks as well as my guest network and the performance is good. It takes a while to even begin loading. They are not plugged in during testing. Why dont you like ookla tests? IOS has not been updated recently and they are all running ios 8. Dont use any task managers.
As Tim said regarding ookla, their results are inflated and their test methods aren't accurate.
After it's slow to begin loading, is it fast loading? Does your guest network bypass pfsense?
Generally the initial loading would be it trying to resolve DNS names. Are you blocking any ranges of IPs via pfblocker or some other IP list? Have you tried connecting to a website directly via its IP?
I also would suggest what Tim said, backup your config and give pfsense a clean install, see if the problem persists.
Sorry for the bombarding of questions, just trying to get a little more on what's happening in the background.
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@heavy1metal:
@heavy1metal:
Have you tested it on other wireless networks? (friends/McDonalds/Starbucks/Chickfa) How is the performance over the air? How is it slow, as in it starts loading an image and takes a while ("drawing" the image) … or does it take a while to even begin loading, but is fast once it begins? Are they plugged in when you test (something that might trigger a profile/battery-saving change)?
don't trust anything ookla based (speedtest.net etc..).
Has your iOS been updated recently? Do you use any applications on the iDevices like a task manager? How many iDevices have you tried and are they all running the same flavor of iOS?
Yes i have tested on friends networks as well as my guest network and the performance is good. It takes a while to even begin loading. They are not plugged in during testing. Why dont you like ookla tests? IOS has not been updated recently and they are all running ios 8. Dont use any task managers.
As Tim said regarding ookla, their results are inflated and their test methods aren't accurate.
After it's slow to begin loading, is it fast loading? Does your guest network bypass pfsense?
Generally the initial loading would be it trying to resolve DNS names. Are you blocking any ranges of IPs via pfblocker or some other IP list? Have you tried connecting to a website directly via its IP?
I also would suggest what Tim said, backup your config and give pfsense a clean install, see if the problem persists.
Sorry for the bombarding of questions, just trying to get a little more on what's happening in the background.
its hard to say, it seems after i click on an image on instagram it shows the loading screen but doesnt move for a couple of seconds and then all of the sudden it loads it fast. I have a dns app on my iphone that is basically equivlant to the dig command from bind so it shows lookup times, it doesnt seem that the lookups are slow by any means, always below 70ms. Not blocking anything besides the bogon networks.
Just did a complete reinstall of pfsense with a usb stick and then changed the config back to how i had it manually instead of restore because i wanted to make sure that wouldnt cause an issue somehow. Still getting this problem.
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Does it affect macs too? Run ICSI netalyzr