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Slow client VPN speed
Windows 10 client connecting to an MX64, authenticating using AD.
I am able to connect without any problem, however it is painfully slow.
Copy a file from a shared drive on the office network runs between 170-350 kbps
We have a 10 mbps connection at the MX64 and a 150 mbps at my house.
Lots of bandwidth available at the MX64 uplink.
I have deleted and recreated the connection a few times, I am baffled.
I use some remote desktop connections to various servers on the corporate network that I have been using forwarded ports at the MX to connect via RDP, but I would like to shut those down and only use RDP over VPN.
The RDP connection is almost unusable over the VPN currently.
Ideas?
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This can be caused by an MTU squeeze. Try an MTU of 1400 on your machine (reboot after changing it). You can use these instructions for Windows 7/8:
https://support.zen.co.uk/kb/Knowledgebase/Changing-the-MTU-size-in-Windows-Vista-7-or-8
You may have an issue with asymmetric timing. You can try enabling timestamping with this command:
netsh int tcp set global timestamps=enabled
You could possibly be running an MX firmware with an issue. I would upgrade to 14.39 if you are not running it already.
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Thanks, tried the MTU change - no difference.
Ran out of time to try the timing, will try this evening.
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@Microfiche 14.39 is a stable release candidate. It would be ok to upgrade.
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Upgraded to 14.39 and recreated the VPN on my desktop.
No change at all.
Also enabled timestamping.
Switched my MTU back to 1500 as 1400 made no difference.
It almost looks like the speed is being capped because it is so stable at 177 kbps. Weird.
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Looks like it is machine specific - connecting from my laptop works fine.
Both are Windows 10.
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When you mean works fine do you mean speed is correct on your laptop?
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In addition to the "what does works fine mean" question, how many machines are affected by this issue? Where is your laptop connecting from?
Is your laptop on the same remote network as the device(s) having problems?
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The laptop and the desktop are both connecting from my home network.
Those are the only 2 computers I have tested from.
The speed over the laptop VPN is similar to a non-VPN connection - hence fine.
The speed over the desktop connection seems to be about 170 kbps.
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Which is just around 1.42Mbps. Another good test would be to check speed on another wireless connection or (hotspot) see what your results are too.
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@kYutobi wrote:Which is just around 1.42Mbps. Another good test would be to check speed on another wireless connection or (hotspot) see what your results are too.
177 kbps = 1.42 mbps?
I will be in another province tomorrow, will try from there.
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Can you check the speed of the NIC on the Desktop, if it is set Auto or has a different setup?
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Set to auto negotiate. Connected at 1Gbps
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Hi there Microfiche,
I know this is quite an old post, but did you ever find out the solution? I have a very similar problem. I have a remote user who is already on his second laptop in a month and I don't want to have to swap out another one just yet. Internet connection is great but it tanks on VPN. 80 Mbps all day when on regular internet, then it falls way down to 1 or 2 Mbps on our corporate VPN. No other users experience this. Thank you for you time!
Jared
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Hello all
Enabling "Routing and Remote Access service" on each laptop fixed the problem for me.
I moved from 310Kb/s to 50Mb/s just by activating the service.
Other solution which look to work:
- Installing WireShark
- Installing Cisco AnyConnect (without using it)
No time to try but i suspect those software to activate other Windows 11 services such as "Routing and Remote Access service"
