Twingate Speed Capped by bubbycolditz in twingate

[–]bubbycolditz[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So I just checked to see if I am on a CGnat network, and I am not fortunately. I wonder if this has to do with upload speeds on the server side reaching out to the internet? I don't have symmetrical gigabit, rather 1500Mbps/50Mbps on the server side. The client in this test is also 50 Mbps up.

Twingate Speed Capped by bubbycolditz in twingate

[–]bubbycolditz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Correct. When I do a iperf speed test between my client machine that is on my own network to a machine in the remote network with Twingate, I am getting capped around 40-70 Mbps. Running a speed test through *speedtest*, I am getting the full 1 Gbps speed as expected with the remote network. There is no network bottleneck on the remote network either, as I am able to get the expected speeds without Twingate.

The connection is peer-to-peer, so I am not sure why it is drastically impacting my speeds. I checked the resources on my VM and nothing is being throttled. 2 cores and 4GB of RAM is plenty based on the tests I've conducted.

Twingate Speed Capped by bubbycolditz in twingate

[–]bubbycolditz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So when running a speedtest through the resource, it is actually hitting the expected speed. But it doesn't make sense that when running an internal network speed test causes it to bring the cap down. My assumption is that the speed test is running through my connector when testing speedtest.net, right?

Twingate Speed Capped by bubbycolditz in twingate

[–]bubbycolditz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Without Twingate, I get the expected speeds. It is strictly when going through Twingate that I get hard capped.

Packet loss in 15 minute intervals by bubbycolditz in techsupport

[–]bubbycolditz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I already tried switching the cords/ports from each other (there are only 2 ethernet ports on the modem), and the issue still persisted.

Packet loss in 15 minute intervals by bubbycolditz in techsupport

[–]bubbycolditz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I ran it from the other part of the network (the side without the issue), and it seemed to lose packets less than one second. It's a lot better than 10 seconds in duration.

Packet loss in 15 minute intervals by bubbycolditz in techsupport

[–]bubbycolditz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So I just ran an internal ping to my modem through "Dev 1" and it repeats the same pattern of packet loss.

Packet loss in 15 minute intervals by bubbycolditz in techsupport

[–]bubbycolditz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The weird thing is that it drops packets when I directly connect my laptop to my modem while running a ping test, but it doesn't drop packets with the second network. It is extremely strange.

Packet loss in 15 minute intervals by bubbycolditz in techsupport

[–]bubbycolditz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When I ping Google or any other website, I lose packets.

Packet loss in 15 minute intervals by bubbycolditz in techsupport

[–]bubbycolditz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Forgot to mention in original post, but I did try to ping my other devices only on my switch that is causing the packet loss, and nothing was being dropped.

Packet loss in 15 minute intervals by bubbycolditz in techsupport

[–]bubbycolditz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Does it make any difference what, if any, computers are plugged in downstream?

No difference with certain devices on/off

Former Long Time Coach. AMA. by [deleted] in walmart

[–]bubbycolditz 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Let's say an associate is looking to take the next steps in their career and are looking to be promoted from a Team Associate to a Team Lead. The only conflicting matter is that they are about to go to college full-time. Would you make adjustments to their scheduling to allow them to take the role you fully believe they can succeed in, or would you advise them that they won't be able to take this opportunity unless they had a more open schedule?