DorsetBunny
Technical User
So I have a nasty line here (nothing to be done about that until the telecoms provider gets bored with my one letter a week).
I have 7.5db at best (and has dropped to 5.5db during peak times). I've already done all I can internally (only the dsl line hooked up, phones in bin, hi grade socket filter, cat5 socket > router etc...).
Is there anything I can do in the router (other than dsl noise margin 3) to improve traffic flow?
Basically I do lots of gaming UDP/TCP traffic and latency is the obvious be-all and end-all. I get crappy pings.
the only other traffic is the usual net stuff, and my ssh to my webserver (Germany).
these are low priority really so am asking the cisco-gods if there is anything tweaky I can do in the confs to whoosh those packets through.
I am on a fast latency connection (that did help a bit). I am rated at 4-5Mb and the DSLAM seems to like syncing at 5000ish (would it benefit if I asked for a 4000cap on sync's?)
The cisco is running 12.4(25c) and is about to be 80MB/24MB (so I can fit the SDM on there with this IOS).
I have 7.5db at best (and has dropped to 5.5db during peak times). I've already done all I can internally (only the dsl line hooked up, phones in bin, hi grade socket filter, cat5 socket > router etc...).
Is there anything I can do in the router (other than dsl noise margin 3) to improve traffic flow?
Basically I do lots of gaming UDP/TCP traffic and latency is the obvious be-all and end-all. I get crappy pings.
the only other traffic is the usual net stuff, and my ssh to my webserver (Germany).
these are low priority really so am asking the cisco-gods if there is anything tweaky I can do in the confs to whoosh those packets through.
I am on a fast latency connection (that did help a bit). I am rated at 4-5Mb and the DSLAM seems to like syncing at 5000ish (would it benefit if I asked for a 4000cap on sync's?)
The cisco is running 12.4(25c) and is about to be 80MB/24MB (so I can fit the SDM on there with this IOS).