[69206] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: DSL and/or Routing Problems
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Joe Maimon)
Tue Mar 30 09:47:51 2004
Date: Tue, 30 Mar 2004 09:47:06 -0500
From: Joe Maimon <jmaimon@ttec.com>
To: nanog@merit.edu
In-Reply-To: <200403301208.i2UC8Hrm017646@mail.trustem.net>
Errors-To: owner-nanog-outgoing@merit.edu
Jon.Kibler@aset.com wrote:
>Greetings NANOGers,
>
>Yesterday we starting noticing long delays on an ADSL connection.
>
>
<snip>
Assuming it is not your ISP or that the telco is the ISP.
Dont believe them. Tell them to reset the port. Tell them to change the
pairs. Tell them to switch your line to a different port on the dslam.
Tell them to put you into a different CO. Tell them to dispatch a
technician to test your line "at the nid". Get a FTP server with good
connectivity on the internet and upload/download to it, measuring your
speed. Show the telco low bandwidth and packet loss. Do some flood
pinging (carefully).
Test the line with a cheap linksys or netgear or smc or dlink or similar
"broadband" residential router with ADSL modem (or even software [google
for raspppoe for windows, linux has pppoe software available as well -
if thats what your setup uses]).
Spend a few dollars and get ADSL on another phone line if that all does
not work.
For the money they make off a ADSL line, a Telco is unlikely to do more
than run the standard automated web testing thingy and say "Everything
fine here!" and hope you dont call back and cost them more. That makes
sense. The more support time and expertise expended on you, the less
profit generated for them by your business.
I cant count the number of "Tests perfectly!" that get resolved
mysteriously inside the telco after some more harrasment. Furthermore,
our experience on average is that the more the line costs per month, the
better service you get on it. Typicaly with any large amount of
circuits, you will find the right people in the telco who actually give
a damn about you and can "get things done"
Joe