Hi!
On Wed, 13 Apr 2011, Daniel Halperin wrote:
On Wed, Apr 13, 2011 at 10:57 AM, Justin Piszcz
<jpiszcz@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi,
When powersave is enabled, it is very jumpy, I've used satellite comms
before
and (~600ms-1200ms was more smooth) as it did not jump around as
much. The
application is just a standalone desktop with minimal activity for the
majority
of the time, maybe thats why..
With powersave disabled, I now see 0% packet loss (802.11n) and low
ping
times, this looks like the proper solution for the wireless USB
device I
am using. By the way, is it possible/are there wireless USB devices
out
there
that support wake on wireless lan (WOWL?
Your ping command with power off:
1408 bytes from server (192.168.1.2): icmp_req=539 ttl=64 time=1.07 ms
1408 bytes from server (192.168.1.2): icmp_req=540 ttl=64 time=1.31 ms
1408 bytes from server (192.168.1.2): icmp_req=541 ttl=64 time=1.07 ms
1408 bytes from server (192.168.1.2): icmp_req=542 ttl=64 time=1.26 ms
Your ping command with power on:
1408 bytes from server (192.168.1.2): icmp_req=649 ttl=64 time=1.80 ms
1408 bytes from server (192.168.1.2): icmp_req=650 ttl=64 time=1.85 ms
1408 bytes from server (192.168.1.2): icmp_req=651 ttl=64 time=2.86 ms
1408 bytes from server (192.168.1.2): icmp_req=652 ttl=64 time=1.46 ms
You are correct, if there is a lot of traffic, its good, but if the
system
is relatively idle and all that's going on is an SSH session, there is
horrible
latency.
Gotcha. I might still look around in the network stack and/or driver
and see what the time constants are. For instance:
(1) What is the AP's beacon period and DTIM? Typical values are 100
TUs for beacons (102.4 ms) and 2 for DTIM (2 beacons per power-save
wakeup) which should imply a mean of 100 and max of 200 ms delay even
on pings.
I am using a WNDR3700 with default settings in terms of beacons/etc. No
issues with any device (laptop, computer, etc (in windows)), I have two
wireless USB adapters (bought two) and in Windows, no problems, I
don't think
it is the WNDR3700. As far as linux/wpa-supplicant, using default
settings.
(2) How long does the client wait after waking up to go back to sleep?
It should be at least a few seconds. For ssh, then, you should see
something like a 100-200 ms delay for the first key and then nothing
at all unless you stop typing for a bit.
It lags with each word I type, it is terrible. If I run something like
dmesg or ps auxww, the entire session freezes for 5-10 seconds before it
comes back.
Yes, it's terrible. I have the same problems with ping and ssh with
latest GIT
linux on my ARM platform and two different USB Wi-Fi adapters based on
RT3070 chipset ("D-Link DWA-125" and "Qcom LR802UKN3").
I'm SSHing over a Wi-Fi link that uses power save right this second,
and have for years. It's not generally an issue, I suspect something
worse is going on.
Maybe the wireless usb adapters do not function well in Linux with
power save
on.
I bought them awhile ago, they had the highest reviews, and in Windows,
they did do 10-15MiB/s, in Linux, I see ~4.6MiB/s (but that was with
power save on) about the same, 4.5MiB/s.
http://www.amazon.com/Medialink-Wireless-Adapter-802-11n-Compatible/dp/B002RM08RE
100+0 records in
100+0 records out
104857600 bytes (105 MB) copied, 23.2803 s, 4.5 MB/s
Justin.
Best regards!
--
Igor Plyatov
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