2005-10-27, 08:02 AM
Hi all,
This is more of a tip than anything.
When I first set up my MVP (rev D1) I had it connected directly to my router (Belkin F5D7231-4) along with the PC running GBPVR (0.9413), two other wired PC's and a laptop connected to the wireless. Every once in a while the MVP would lose connection and go to the main menu. It seemed to do this only when there was high network traffic on the router from the other PC's. The WAF was losing points so I thought I would give an alternate setup a try.
What I did was put my MVP and my GBPVR PC on a Netgear 5 port 10/100 switch I had laying around. I connected that switch to one of the now free ports on the router. This way I know that my MVP to GBPVR traffic was truly segregated from the rest of the network traffic in and out of the router. Now I know some will say that the switch built into the router should handle the switching and this shouldn't be an issue. That is SOMEWHAT true. The buffer cache in the router could be running full and if there is a lot of traffic then the logical "switches" will get refreshed frequently.
With the MPV and GBPVR off of the router's switch it hasn't disconnected or restarted in 3 days. Not even once.
Maybe it is an issue with my router but I believe this is the best setup to go with for a wired system with moderate to heavy network use.
If you are having disconnect issues and have access to a switch then you should give this a try. Helped the WAF here immensely!
This is more of a tip than anything.
When I first set up my MVP (rev D1) I had it connected directly to my router (Belkin F5D7231-4) along with the PC running GBPVR (0.9413), two other wired PC's and a laptop connected to the wireless. Every once in a while the MVP would lose connection and go to the main menu. It seemed to do this only when there was high network traffic on the router from the other PC's. The WAF was losing points so I thought I would give an alternate setup a try.
What I did was put my MVP and my GBPVR PC on a Netgear 5 port 10/100 switch I had laying around. I connected that switch to one of the now free ports on the router. This way I know that my MVP to GBPVR traffic was truly segregated from the rest of the network traffic in and out of the router. Now I know some will say that the switch built into the router should handle the switching and this shouldn't be an issue. That is SOMEWHAT true. The buffer cache in the router could be running full and if there is a lot of traffic then the logical "switches" will get refreshed frequently.
With the MPV and GBPVR off of the router's switch it hasn't disconnected or restarted in 3 days. Not even once.
Maybe it is an issue with my router but I believe this is the best setup to go with for a wired system with moderate to heavy network use.
If you are having disconnect issues and have access to a switch then you should give this a try. Helped the WAF here immensely!