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Forum Discussion
perrynmyers
Sep 27, 2020Star
Orbi Showing Wireless Devices as Wired in Attached Devices List
Hi, Issue: I have found that on RBR50 deployments where there are two satellites connected via Ethernet Backhaul, that the Attached Devices List will incorrectly show which Orbi device a network...
- Jan 21, 2021
Hi,
I just closed out my support case with Netgear on this issue. It took 4 months (opened in August, finally closed in January) and I spent much of that time being passed back and forth between support associates. But in the end, Netgear finally admitted to me the following about this particular issue.
From Support:
"I have confirmed with our engineers that the satellite has a limitation with reporting connected devices while its in ethernet backhaul as the router identifies that the wired backhaul connection of the satellite rather than the actual connection of the device to the satellite which are engineers a indicated that it is a limitation in the design of the system.
I apologize for the inconvenience. Let me know if you have questions or concerns."I then asked:
"Is it unfixable and therefore a product flaw that just needs to be lived with?"
And was told:
"As I have confirmed that this is a limitation as per our engineers. We were only informed of this upon consultation with our engineers and I sincerely apologize if it took awhile to get answers for you."
(Note: This answer from Engineering took 4 months to get to.)
So in short, the way the Orbi system is designed, it is impossible for them to report properly whether a device is Wired or Wireless if any of the satellites are using Ethernet Backhaul.
In my investigation into how the Orbi works (which under the covers appears to use technology provided by Fing to do device discovery), here is what I summarized based on a discussion with technical support at Netgear:
"After noting that all of the devices incorrectly labeled as Wired were coming from the RBS40V, you suggested that we remove the Ethernet backhaul from that specific satellite to see if it would correct the problem. I did this, and checked the Attached Devices list. I found that the RBS40V no longer reported any Wired devices at all. I also found that the RBR50 Attached Devices list was now 100% correct, and no longer incorrectly listed any wireless devices as Wired. You also mentioned that the Orbi's use Fing's software to do device collection. Perhaps the way the Fing utility is being run on the RBS40V is causing it to collect Wired devices instead of only reporting back the Wireless ones. Again, thank you for the call and helping to do some additional troubleshooting on this. I hope the above notes are helpful."
I also provided a potential software solution that could likely fix the problem:
"Each device (RBR50, RBS50, RBS40V) collects a list of devices it "sees". Each device knows which clients are connected wirelessly to it, and each device can see ARP requests for devices not connected to it and it detects those devices as "Wired". So, every device is both reporting "Wireless" devices accurately, and reporting "Wired" devices sometimes accurately, and sometimes inaccurately.
The right way to fix this would be for the RBR50 to have logic that preferred reporting Wireless if it gets conflicting information. For example: RBS40V reports a device as 2.4G, RBR50 reports same device as Wired. The RBR50 should "prefer" the Wireless reporting, since that is more accurate than the Wired reporting, and therefore should display the device as 2.4G. Right now, it appears to be a "random" determination as to whether the RBR50 will pick the Wired or Wireless designation for a device that is reported by multiple Orbi devices.
Further, Satellites (like the RBS40V and RBS50) can report Wired devices they see to the RBR50, but they should never list those as "locally connected". There's no way to determine if a wired device is connected to one Orbi device or another, so the default should be to always say that Wired devices are solely connected to the primary router (i.e. RBR50)
If the above logic was put into place, I believe this problem would be resolved."Given that a user would expect to see Wired and Wireless devices reported accurately, and there is a potential software solution to fixing this issue, I believe this absolutely is classified as a bug.
Netgear has chosen to not fix this issue, and that is of course their perrogative. Not all bugs are of equal priority, and this one being purely cosmetic perhaps does not rise to the level of importance to justify investment in it being fixed. And it could also be that the fix for this would be more invasive than is warranted for an existing deployed system. But, I did suggest to Netgear support that perhaps they could implement what I described above in future generations of Orbi systems if that was indeed a concern.
In the end, the answer I got indicated that it is a limitation of the system. But in a sense, any bug can be waved away as a limitation of the system. A bug is a bug, even if the software vendor chooses not to fix it. I am content with the response I got from Netgear, because they acknowledged this was an issue (by claiming it was a limitation of the design) and eventually letting me know that they would not address it. (I only wish that it didn't require countless hours of my time and literally 4 months to get there...)
On the other hand, this is a bug, and I would hope that in future generations of Orbi software that they fix it, and I believe that the mechanism I suggested above could do that.
If the software was Open Source, I likely could fix this myself... But I could only go so far in trying to fix the issue given that much of the Orbi software are composed of binary blobs without accompanying source code.
Best regards,
Perry
FURRYe38
Sep 27, 2020Guru
If you have RBS that are ethernet connected to the RBR, then any wifi devices connected at the RBS will get reported as wired connected devices as the line of status and detection are over the wired ethernet connection between the RBR and RBS, that the RBR uses to report the connection status. If you disconnect the RBS from the wire and let it wirelessly connect, then the status will change from wired to wireless for those devices connected at the RBS. This is normal operation.
perrynmyers
Sep 27, 2020Star
That answer doesn't make sense given the explanation I gave in the original post.
Take the wireless connected Generator I mentioned. Sometimes it is detected as being attached vis 2.4g to the Garage Orbi (RBR50S). And sometimes it is detected as being attached via Wired to the Main Orbi (RBR50). On any given day, it'll show up in one state or the other, and toggle later.
If this is normal operation, then why does it "toggle back and forth" between the two states?
Shouldn't it either:
1) Be detected as Wirelessly connected to the Garage Orbi and show as associated with that access point via 2.4g?
OR
2) Be detected by the Main Orbi and always show up as Wired, because it is not connected wirelessly to the Main Orbi (as it is connected via 2.4g to the Garage Orbi)
To me, it seems like there is a race condition here, and depending on the outcome of the race, one of the Orbis "wins" and gets to associate the device with it. If Main Orbi wins, it shows up as Wired (associated with that Orbi). If Garage Orbi wins, it shows up as 2.4g (associated with that Orbi).
This may be working "as coded" but I consider this to be a user experience deficiency that should be fixed. It's a bug.
Thanks,
Perry
- FURRYe38Sep 27, 2020Guru
Is the system working and is the device working other than the status changing?
Possible that the device is connecting to the RBR and when this happens then yes it will report as a wireless device instead of wired.
It's up to devices to pick and choose where they connect too. So this one device seems to be changing the connection location from the RBS which are wired to the RBR which would report and wireless.
This is not a bug.If you feel other wise, then please contact NG support. There would be nothing we can do to effect any FW changes here in the forum.
Good Luck.
- perrynmyersSep 27, 2020Star
The devices are working normally. It's purely a cosmetic issue in the Attached Devices reporting, as far as I can tell. That said, cosmetic issues affect the user experience, and so they should be fixed (but I agree at a lower priority than a functional issue that prevents usage).
The device is not connecting to the RBR (Main Orbi), because it is far enough away that there is zero signal at the device from the RBR. The RBR is in the basement of the house and also several hundred feet away, and a signal analysis from my phone doesn't even detect the RBR signal from the device's location at the Garage.
This is in fact why I am using Ethernet Backhaul. I am unable to do 5g backhaul (or get 2.4g signal) from the RBS (Garage Orbi) to the RBR (Main Orbi). Therefore, it is not the case that the device is connecting to the RBR, as it physcially cannot do so. Devices can pick and choose where they connect to, but only within the limits of the range of the access points.
I have contacted NG support, so far they have taken a month or so to... do pretty much nothing. I took this to the forum mainly to let others know about the problem, and to see if anyone else with a similar setup sees the same issue. Sometimes community forums are about sharing information and not just resolving the issue. :)
- FURRYe38Sep 27, 2020Guru
Are the RBS directly connected to the RBR or are there any kind of LAN switches in be ween the RBR and RBS?
IF this is just one device, then user experience maybe effected however honestly, how often does the status need to be checked. If you know the devices is connected to the RBS and the RBS is wired, then for the part, the status will be wired.Something to keep in contact with NG support about to see if they can do anything. I kind of doubt NG will be doing anything to correcxt the issue since this seems to be a corner case issue. Takes time and money to effect changes in FW development. Many people don't understand this.
- ottopaulsenJan 20, 2021Tutor
How can you say that it is not a bug, that wireless devices are shown as wired? Of course it is a bug. You must see this from a users perspective. There is no way that those devices are wired.
For me using the UI it is very misleading that wireless devices are shown as wired.
Netgear should fix this!
- FURRYe38Jan 21, 2021Guru
It's NOT a bug. Again, when RBS are ETHERNET (wired) connected to the RBR, and any wireless device is the connected to the RBS, the detected connection will be wireled, not wireless incoming to the RBR since the RBS is ETHERNET(wired) connected to the RBR. If the RBS was wireleslly connected to the RBR, the the wireless device will be reported as wireless, not wired.
You can of course contact NG support to express your concerns over this as there would be nothing we can do about it here in the forums.
Good Luck.
ottopaulsen wrote:How can you say that it is not a bug, that wireless devices are shown as wired? Of course it is a bug. You must see this from a users perspective. There is no way that those devices are wired.
For me using the UI it is very misleading that wireless devices are shown as wired.
Netgear should fix this!