Routers are one area of my knowledge that I have a gaping hole at.
I dont mean learning what QoS, NAT or uPnP are, Im fine there, but how do I spec a router to my needs? I am finding it hard to get data on them that makes sense to my limited knowledge.
I've been using windows boxes with connection sharing for some years, since Win98, and its served me well, but now I'm starting to load the box heavily and networking is suffering and even failing, which I need to stop. I upgraded it to a 2.4ghz x2 on an m2n with dual gig E but its still awful.
Its just right now, im starting to run small servers, atm its currently 20 ports with services on pretty much 24/7 that must stay connected for 2 or 3 weeks at a time. Their collective bandwidth is consistently 1mb down, 200k up and I aim to grow that to 50-60 ports at least.
Plus I want to use bittorrent at least a bit - the pc used to handle 300 bt connections through a single port pair (udp/tcp) without load but now ive crashed the M2N box twice downloading updates I just cant risk losing these services. They are only making me a few dollars after costs, not enough to spend huge figures on enterprise kit, yet I'm worried that moving to a residential class cable router is going to end in tears.
So I have to have a router but how to chose?!? All i need is Qos and stability, I dont need VPN or wireless of any kind (it'll just be disabled). I looked on the linksys site, theres no mention of connections or any helpful technical spec to purchase by.
Someone gave me a WRT54G V2.2 but after a long trawl i found mention it only managed about 90 connections so im afraid to use that, but thats old now. Surely things have changed?
And are 300 bittorrent connections really connections in the same sense throught one port? It certainly gives the serving PC fits, I can almost hear it groan as the ICS gobbles up the cpu cycles. So do I just add up what i know I need and buy to that? eg about 400 connections for bt, my services and some overhead?? or is that not the right way of thinking?
Thanks a lot to any of you that can reveal the hardware mystery a little more.
I dont mean learning what QoS, NAT or uPnP are, Im fine there, but how do I spec a router to my needs? I am finding it hard to get data on them that makes sense to my limited knowledge.
I've been using windows boxes with connection sharing for some years, since Win98, and its served me well, but now I'm starting to load the box heavily and networking is suffering and even failing, which I need to stop. I upgraded it to a 2.4ghz x2 on an m2n with dual gig E but its still awful.
Its just right now, im starting to run small servers, atm its currently 20 ports with services on pretty much 24/7 that must stay connected for 2 or 3 weeks at a time. Their collective bandwidth is consistently 1mb down, 200k up and I aim to grow that to 50-60 ports at least.
Plus I want to use bittorrent at least a bit - the pc used to handle 300 bt connections through a single port pair (udp/tcp) without load but now ive crashed the M2N box twice downloading updates I just cant risk losing these services. They are only making me a few dollars after costs, not enough to spend huge figures on enterprise kit, yet I'm worried that moving to a residential class cable router is going to end in tears.
So I have to have a router but how to chose?!? All i need is Qos and stability, I dont need VPN or wireless of any kind (it'll just be disabled). I looked on the linksys site, theres no mention of connections or any helpful technical spec to purchase by.
Someone gave me a WRT54G V2.2 but after a long trawl i found mention it only managed about 90 connections so im afraid to use that, but thats old now. Surely things have changed?
And are 300 bittorrent connections really connections in the same sense throught one port? It certainly gives the serving PC fits, I can almost hear it groan as the ICS gobbles up the cpu cycles. So do I just add up what i know I need and buy to that? eg about 400 connections for bt, my services and some overhead?? or is that not the right way of thinking?
Thanks a lot to any of you that can reveal the hardware mystery a little more.