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Forum Discussion
idotf
Sep 02, 2015Aspirant
Netgear A6210 on Windows 7 PC crashes Netgear R8000 WiFi Router w/ DOS Attack
I recently rebooted my cable modem and my Netgear WIFI router (R8000) because my wifi connection on my Windows 7 PC (using a Netgear A6210) was telling me there was an IP conflict on the network. The windows machine would fix the IP for a moment and give me another working connection and then my WIFI would error out and I would be disconnected again. So, as I said above, after I rebooted my router and my cable modem, my R8000 router went into an endless reboot until I pulled the A6210 WIFI stick off my Windows 7 PC. I proceeded to keep it off the network and my router stopped rebooting.
When I went into the router for more information, it gave me the following log information for why it was shutting down and turning back on:
[DoS attack: FIN Scan] attack packets in last 20 sec from ip [23.79.15.24], Tuesday, Sep 01,2015 17:31:50
[DoS attack: ACK Scan] attack packets in last 20 sec from ip [23.79.15.24], Tuesday, Sep 01,2015 17:31:49
[DoS attack: FIN Scan] attack packets in last 20 sec from ip [23.79.15.24], Tuesday, Sep 01,2015 17:31:43
[DoS attack: ACK Scan] attack packets in last 20 sec from ip [172.224.169.5], Tuesday, Sep 01,2015 17:27:36
[DoS attack: FIN Scan] attack packets in last 20 sec from ip [172.224.169.5], Tuesday, Sep 01,2015 17:27:33
I'm not sure what to think. I still have not tried to plugin my wifi stick for that PC again, since my router won't keep working when I do that. These are both netgear products, made for each other, so why is this happening now? They've been working fine together for almost a year now.
Any help or advice is greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance.
2 Replies
- JamesGLNETGEAR Employee Retired
Hi idotf,
Welcome to Community!
Base on the logs, the IP addresses are public IPs which are from outside your network. Try to install the adapter on a different computer or connect it again to the same computer then disconnect the router from Internet and check if you still get DoS attack.
Regards,
JamesGL
Community Team
- idotfAspirant
Thanks for the advice. Turns out is was EA's Origin Gaming Client that was crashing my router. I did some trouble shooting with the startup items, and one of the games was downloading a update that was crashing the system. Not sure how downloading a game update through a legitimate gaming client application can cause a DOS attack, or something else... But, I clicked on "repair" for the game in the Origin client and it went through a repair process and updated perfectly, with no more router/wifi breaks.
Hope this helps someone in the future.