Jumbo Frames on DIR-842












0














Are Jumbo Frames supported by the D-Link DIR-842? If so, which maximum size?



It supports 1 Gbit/s so I guess it should but I'm not sure, haven't found much while Googling.










share|improve this question






















  • Have you taken a look at the specifications?
    – Ramhound
    Jul 30 '17 at 16:29










  • Related: superuser.com/questions/197569/jumbo-frames-on-dir-655?rq=1
    – Ramhound
    Jul 30 '17 at 16:29










  • Yes; They are supported based on my research. How large of a frame will depend on the clients connected to the LAN ports
    – Ramhound
    Jul 30 '17 at 16:38












  • The specs doesn't mention "Jumbo Frames" and there's no option in the web UI to configure it in the DHCP server.
    – Mikael Dúi Bolinder
    Jul 30 '17 at 18:37
















0














Are Jumbo Frames supported by the D-Link DIR-842? If so, which maximum size?



It supports 1 Gbit/s so I guess it should but I'm not sure, haven't found much while Googling.










share|improve this question






















  • Have you taken a look at the specifications?
    – Ramhound
    Jul 30 '17 at 16:29










  • Related: superuser.com/questions/197569/jumbo-frames-on-dir-655?rq=1
    – Ramhound
    Jul 30 '17 at 16:29










  • Yes; They are supported based on my research. How large of a frame will depend on the clients connected to the LAN ports
    – Ramhound
    Jul 30 '17 at 16:38












  • The specs doesn't mention "Jumbo Frames" and there's no option in the web UI to configure it in the DHCP server.
    – Mikael Dúi Bolinder
    Jul 30 '17 at 18:37














0












0








0







Are Jumbo Frames supported by the D-Link DIR-842? If so, which maximum size?



It supports 1 Gbit/s so I guess it should but I'm not sure, haven't found much while Googling.










share|improve this question













Are Jumbo Frames supported by the D-Link DIR-842? If so, which maximum size?



It supports 1 Gbit/s so I guess it should but I'm not sure, haven't found much while Googling.







networking jumbo-frames






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Jul 30 '17 at 15:22









Mikael Dúi Bolinder

68331128




68331128












  • Have you taken a look at the specifications?
    – Ramhound
    Jul 30 '17 at 16:29










  • Related: superuser.com/questions/197569/jumbo-frames-on-dir-655?rq=1
    – Ramhound
    Jul 30 '17 at 16:29










  • Yes; They are supported based on my research. How large of a frame will depend on the clients connected to the LAN ports
    – Ramhound
    Jul 30 '17 at 16:38












  • The specs doesn't mention "Jumbo Frames" and there's no option in the web UI to configure it in the DHCP server.
    – Mikael Dúi Bolinder
    Jul 30 '17 at 18:37


















  • Have you taken a look at the specifications?
    – Ramhound
    Jul 30 '17 at 16:29










  • Related: superuser.com/questions/197569/jumbo-frames-on-dir-655?rq=1
    – Ramhound
    Jul 30 '17 at 16:29










  • Yes; They are supported based on my research. How large of a frame will depend on the clients connected to the LAN ports
    – Ramhound
    Jul 30 '17 at 16:38












  • The specs doesn't mention "Jumbo Frames" and there's no option in the web UI to configure it in the DHCP server.
    – Mikael Dúi Bolinder
    Jul 30 '17 at 18:37
















Have you taken a look at the specifications?
– Ramhound
Jul 30 '17 at 16:29




Have you taken a look at the specifications?
– Ramhound
Jul 30 '17 at 16:29












Related: superuser.com/questions/197569/jumbo-frames-on-dir-655?rq=1
– Ramhound
Jul 30 '17 at 16:29




Related: superuser.com/questions/197569/jumbo-frames-on-dir-655?rq=1
– Ramhound
Jul 30 '17 at 16:29












Yes; They are supported based on my research. How large of a frame will depend on the clients connected to the LAN ports
– Ramhound
Jul 30 '17 at 16:38






Yes; They are supported based on my research. How large of a frame will depend on the clients connected to the LAN ports
– Ramhound
Jul 30 '17 at 16:38














The specs doesn't mention "Jumbo Frames" and there's no option in the web UI to configure it in the DHCP server.
– Mikael Dúi Bolinder
Jul 30 '17 at 18:37




The specs doesn't mention "Jumbo Frames" and there's no option in the web UI to configure it in the DHCP server.
– Mikael Dúi Bolinder
Jul 30 '17 at 18:37










1 Answer
1






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0














Yes, jumbo frames are supported in the LAN part of the DIR-842. I've tested this by connecting two gigabit NICs to the LAN ports and sent 9 KB frames between them.



But, the maximum MTU size for the WAN (under IPv4 settings) is 1500, configurable in the web GUI.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    Could you edit your answer to be more specific about what exactly you tested, and how? Did you send a 9k ping from a machine on one LAN port to a machine on another LAN port? Did you send a 9k ping to the router itself and get a reply back? Did you send a 9k ping from LAN to WAN? Did you run a sniffer to ensure you were sending the 9k ping as a single packet?
    – Spiff
    Nov 9 '18 at 2:02










  • @Spiff, I Think the answer is better now.
    – Mikael Dúi Bolinder
    Nov 13 '18 at 13:30











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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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active

oldest

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active

oldest

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0














Yes, jumbo frames are supported in the LAN part of the DIR-842. I've tested this by connecting two gigabit NICs to the LAN ports and sent 9 KB frames between them.



But, the maximum MTU size for the WAN (under IPv4 settings) is 1500, configurable in the web GUI.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    Could you edit your answer to be more specific about what exactly you tested, and how? Did you send a 9k ping from a machine on one LAN port to a machine on another LAN port? Did you send a 9k ping to the router itself and get a reply back? Did you send a 9k ping from LAN to WAN? Did you run a sniffer to ensure you were sending the 9k ping as a single packet?
    – Spiff
    Nov 9 '18 at 2:02










  • @Spiff, I Think the answer is better now.
    – Mikael Dúi Bolinder
    Nov 13 '18 at 13:30
















0














Yes, jumbo frames are supported in the LAN part of the DIR-842. I've tested this by connecting two gigabit NICs to the LAN ports and sent 9 KB frames between them.



But, the maximum MTU size for the WAN (under IPv4 settings) is 1500, configurable in the web GUI.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    Could you edit your answer to be more specific about what exactly you tested, and how? Did you send a 9k ping from a machine on one LAN port to a machine on another LAN port? Did you send a 9k ping to the router itself and get a reply back? Did you send a 9k ping from LAN to WAN? Did you run a sniffer to ensure you were sending the 9k ping as a single packet?
    – Spiff
    Nov 9 '18 at 2:02










  • @Spiff, I Think the answer is better now.
    – Mikael Dúi Bolinder
    Nov 13 '18 at 13:30














0












0








0






Yes, jumbo frames are supported in the LAN part of the DIR-842. I've tested this by connecting two gigabit NICs to the LAN ports and sent 9 KB frames between them.



But, the maximum MTU size for the WAN (under IPv4 settings) is 1500, configurable in the web GUI.






share|improve this answer














Yes, jumbo frames are supported in the LAN part of the DIR-842. I've tested this by connecting two gigabit NICs to the LAN ports and sent 9 KB frames between them.



But, the maximum MTU size for the WAN (under IPv4 settings) is 1500, configurable in the web GUI.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Dec 9 '18 at 14:19

























answered Nov 8 '18 at 23:41









Mikael Dúi Bolinder

68331128




68331128








  • 1




    Could you edit your answer to be more specific about what exactly you tested, and how? Did you send a 9k ping from a machine on one LAN port to a machine on another LAN port? Did you send a 9k ping to the router itself and get a reply back? Did you send a 9k ping from LAN to WAN? Did you run a sniffer to ensure you were sending the 9k ping as a single packet?
    – Spiff
    Nov 9 '18 at 2:02










  • @Spiff, I Think the answer is better now.
    – Mikael Dúi Bolinder
    Nov 13 '18 at 13:30














  • 1




    Could you edit your answer to be more specific about what exactly you tested, and how? Did you send a 9k ping from a machine on one LAN port to a machine on another LAN port? Did you send a 9k ping to the router itself and get a reply back? Did you send a 9k ping from LAN to WAN? Did you run a sniffer to ensure you were sending the 9k ping as a single packet?
    – Spiff
    Nov 9 '18 at 2:02










  • @Spiff, I Think the answer is better now.
    – Mikael Dúi Bolinder
    Nov 13 '18 at 13:30








1




1




Could you edit your answer to be more specific about what exactly you tested, and how? Did you send a 9k ping from a machine on one LAN port to a machine on another LAN port? Did you send a 9k ping to the router itself and get a reply back? Did you send a 9k ping from LAN to WAN? Did you run a sniffer to ensure you were sending the 9k ping as a single packet?
– Spiff
Nov 9 '18 at 2:02




Could you edit your answer to be more specific about what exactly you tested, and how? Did you send a 9k ping from a machine on one LAN port to a machine on another LAN port? Did you send a 9k ping to the router itself and get a reply back? Did you send a 9k ping from LAN to WAN? Did you run a sniffer to ensure you were sending the 9k ping as a single packet?
– Spiff
Nov 9 '18 at 2:02












@Spiff, I Think the answer is better now.
– Mikael Dúi Bolinder
Nov 13 '18 at 13:30




@Spiff, I Think the answer is better now.
– Mikael Dúi Bolinder
Nov 13 '18 at 13:30


















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