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Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
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Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
I have been having network problems with my Orbi system for a few months now.. The symptoms are similar to issues others have reported, where satellites and other devices gradually disappear from then network. I have upgraded (and downgraded) the firmware multiple times, done many 'factory resets' and the problem still persisted.
I have finally worked out what is going on... and it's either a bug in the Orbi firmware (currently using V2.5.1.16), or in an Aukey USB-C docking station.
The symptoms are as follows:
My home network has several switches. The RBR50 is plugged into the 'root' switch (a TP-link) and all the other switches and devices are connected to other ports on this switch. The USB-C hub is plugged directly into one of the RJ45 ports on the RBR50.
I'm wondering what the best way is to fix/avoid this problem? It would be extremely tedious to have to disconnect the RJ45 cable from my router every time I unplug the laptop. Are there any diagnostics that can be turned on to understand why the RBR50 is shutting down the rest of my wired network? Are there any config options that might affect this behavior?
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
have you tried plugging the hub into one of the switches to see if it makes an impact?
And the problem doesn't happen at all if the hub hasn't been plugged in?
Another thing you can do is simplify it to make sure its the hub.
just run the router, the hub, and 1 device. disconnect everything else temporarily. run it for the period of time that it usually takes. See if it stays stable or if there's any other issues.
I've found the more complex you make a network, the more challenging it is to troubleshoot.
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
@plemans wrote:have you tried plugging the hub into one of the switches to see if it makes an impact?
I only discovered this late last night so my wife and I are currently enjoying having a stable network for a little while! I'll certainly try that experiment when it's not likely to cause an outage (and outrage).
@plemans wrote:And the problem doesn't happen at all if the hub hasn't been plugged in?
Correct ... I have no problems if I leave that hub disconnected or powered off. (I have even brought up the RBS50 on the wired backhaul and it appears 100% stable.)
Even more conclusively, when all the devices on the wired network have gone away, I can unplug that port of the RBR50 and after a little while the wired devices start reappearing. I left the network in a broken state last night, but unplugged the USB-C hub (on a whim) and by morning everything had come back.
I suspect that what's happening is that the rogue port is somehow 'reflecting' packets it receives and making the router think that various MAC addresses on the wired network are downstream of that port - STP decides there is a loop and starts turning off other parts of the network. With the port disconnected, STP timeouts fire and it eventaully rediscovers the topology.
@plemans wrote:I've found the more complex you make a network, the more challenging it is to troubleshoot.
Too right... (and I have a PhD in computer science)
It's also kinda hard to debug problems like this when all the instructions are on the internet! 😉
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
@pbarham wrote:
@plemans wrote:have you tried plugging the hub into one of the switches to see if it makes an impact?
Just in case other people reading this get the wrong idea, I should probably make it clear that the 'hub' we're referring to isn't an ethernet hub, but a USB-C hub that happens to have a builtin 1Gbe ethernet adapter.
It really shouldn't have the RJ45 port enabled when the usb isn't connected to a host, but it's a powered USB hub and the lights come on as soon as you attach power. The packet activity light on the hub's RJ45 port was blinking even without an attached laptop.
The root cause might be that when a laptop is disconnected, the ethernet adaptor is left running (I've opened a support ticket with Aukey).
But... I don't fully understand why that should have a knock-on effect on the rest of my wired network.
You're right that I should probably try an experiment plugging the USB-hub into one of the other switches on my network- but they are all in different rooms (the cable moderm and Orbi router are the only things in my home office - so using it as a handy ethernet switch seemed convenient!)
I'll look around and see if I have a spared ethernet switch in my networking parts bin and see if the problem requires direct connection to the RBR50. (note- I mainly posted here because so many other people appear to have 'disappearing devices' problems and the firmware revision notes for V2.5.1.16 explicitly mention fixing this)
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
@pbarham wrote:This all works fine, but when I "undock" the laptop to use it elsewhere, the ethernet port on the hub *stays enabled*. This means that:a) the ethernet lights on the hub are blinking the whole time, but even worseb) one by one all the other devices on my wired network get disconnected.
Can you elaborate on what you mean by the other devices on the network get disconnected? Do they lose network connectivity and/or does your laptop lose access to them? Does it affect both wireless and wired devices?
It is a bad thing that one device in your home can cause other devices to become disconnected. Even if it's a problem caused by your USB-C hub misbehaving in someway, the Orbi should not allow this to upset the rest of your network.
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
@Mikey94025 wrote:
@pbarham wrote:This all works fine, but when I "undock" the laptop to use it elsewhere, the ethernet port on the hub *stays enabled*. This means that:a) the ethernet lights on the hub are blinking the whole time, but even worseb) one by one all the other devices on my wired network get disconnected.Can you elaborate on what you mean by the other devices on the network get disconnected? Do they lose network connectivity and/or does your laptop lose access to them? Does it affect both wireless and wired devices?
All the wired devices in the router's 'attached devices' list disappear. They typically go away in groups, 2 or 3 at a time (but this is maybe because of the slow page refresh). Not sure if the groups are related to being on the same ethernet switches. The whole process usually takes just a few minutes before all the wired devices are gone (from the router's perspective).
Once they 'disappear', the devices are no longer pingable by numeric IP address, although this is admittedly from a laptop that's on the wireless network (The laptop still has internet connectivity when all this is happening and can access the router's stats web pages). When I go and physically look at the affected devices, their ethernet ports appear to have 'signal' in that the LEDs are lit. But no packets (at least, the tx/rx lights don't seem to blink IIRC).
I don't know off hand whether the wired devices still have connectivity (between themselves, or to the internet), since they are mainly things like NAS, printers or 'smart device' bridges. I guess I should probably put another laptop on the wired part of the network and see if *it* can ping the NAS (It probably won't be able to access the internet via the router if the router doesn't believe it exists!). From the non-blinking LEDs I'm guessing not, but haven't verified.
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
Does the Orbi system work correctly wiht out this USB 3.0 dock device connected?
Seems like this is a device issue rather then a Orbi issue.
I along with others don't have this device however do have Orbi connected with switches and have not seen any STP problems in a long while. Some problems with STP came from managed switches which had IGMP protocols enabled when used in between the RBR and RBS. The fix for this is to disable IGMP protocols on managed switches.
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
I observe the same behavior on my orbi with a "FLYLAND USB C Hub". If there is nothing connected to it but a ethernet cable is plugged in, everything goes haywire after a few minutes and wired devices can no longer be pinged. Not the entire network shuts down but large parts of it. All wirelessly connected devices continue to be happy.
In my case I have the offending device plugged directly into a sattelite which itself is also on ethernet backhaul. I have not tried what happens if there is another switch in between.
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
This USB hub has a ethernet port?
@mitsuhiko wrote:I observe the same behavior on my orbi with a "FLYLAND USB C Hub". If there is nothing connected to it but a ethernet cable is plugged in, everything goes haywire after a few minutes and wired devices can no longer be pinged. Not the entire network shuts down but large parts of it. All wirelessly connected devices continue to be happy.
In my case I have the offending device plugged directly into a sattelite which itself is also on ethernet backhaul. I have not tried what happens if there is another switch in between.
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
I would check with the mfr of this device to see if it's compatible. If this one device causes this to happen when it's connected, something with this device needs to be looked at. Ask the mfr if they have tested this with a Orbi system.
Is this the unit?
I don't see any ethernet port support on this unit...Is there a different model unit?
It may be this one?
Regardlelss, if this one device is causing problems, then it mabe best NOT to use it with Orbi. Seems like it maybe a compatbility problem with this one particular mfr device. I have a USB 3.0 C adapter that I use with my mac book and it doesn't cause problems. Thought it's just a LAN to USB C adapter, no additional USB ports.
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
Your comment is not super useful. The issue is understood, there are apparently USB-C hubs around that cause the network to drop out. To which degree a faulty device should however take down an entire network is something I believe that should be discussed.
In any case it's valuable for others to know that USB-C ethernet hubs indeed do this to your network, at least when an Orbi is included.
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
Maybe only with with this one particular brand as well. Maybe there seems to be a incompatibility issue this with mfr. Try a different mfr or try a ethernet to USB C only adapter and leave off the USB ports. I have a couple of ethernet adapters and they work fine with my mac book pro. No USB ports though.
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
Well possible various "brands" and "no-names" are soldering or OEM labeling such USB-C hubs with Ethernet ports based on some chip vendor sample PCB design, and deploying some basic firmware (there is on most of these devices!).
To keep it simple: An Ethernet adapter without an active controller (the USB-C host) can keep the link up (why ever, e.g. listening for WoL magic packet, ...) but under all circumstances it does not have to cause havoc on the network - regardless if this is STP (we have no proof, right?), reflecting traffic like broadcast, multicast (to much can lead to a port shutdown, too). If it does ... suspect trash.
Would be interesting to capture the data on that link. But that's a job for the vendors of these devices.
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
For what it's worth it seems like an ANKER ethernet adapter connected to a powered USB-C hub seems to show the same behavior. That said, I'm not sure if it's a real ANKER adapter or actually a fake (bought it on amazon a while back).
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
Something to present the Mfrs of those devices. They should check this out.
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
Looking a bit more it seems like the most likely explanation is that the hubs send PAUSE flow control frames. People have reported issues with devices doing this before: http://jeffq.com/blog/the-ethernet-pause-frame/
If that's the case, then the issue is most likely at least in part with the Orbi.
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
Something that you can file a support ticket about and see. NG would have too look in to that. Again, the mfr of these devices should also review this as well. Possible that there maybe some standards that Orbi doesn't support or something that the mfr of these devices is doing that Orbi doesn't understand or support as well. With all the various mfrs of these devices, there bound to be one or some with odd problems with wifi routers.
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
@mitsuhiko wrote:Looking a bit more it seems like the most likely explanation is that the hubs send PAUSE flow control frames. People have reported issues with devices doing this before: http://jeffq.com/blog/the-ethernet-pause-frame/
If that's the case, then the issue is most likely at least in part with the Orbi.
100% an issue - not just with Orbi, probably with much more Netgear devices from both the consumer and the pro business unit.
@Christian_R consumer BU
@YeZ for small buisness BU
On the Smart Managed Pro product line, the issue was seen (in a different context) in 2017 already - and subsequentially fixed -> https://community.netgear.com/t5/Smart-Plus-and-Smart-Pro-Managed/STP-Leak-using-Broadcast-packet-01...
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
In my network I have an Orbi + two Orbi satellites as well a few switches, one of which is a Netgear unmanaged 4 port switch (FS105v3).
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
I would change out the FS switch for a GS switch. The FS switch will be only 100Mpbs vs GS which is 1000Mbps.
What other mfr and model# switches do you have?
@mitsuhiko wrote:In my network I have an Orbi + two Orbi satellites as well a few switches, one of which is a Netgear unmanaged 4 port switch (FS105v3).
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
Sorry the model number was wrong. It's actually a GS305.
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
In total I have two Netgear GS305 and two TP-LINK TL-SG10.
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
Thanks for clairifying.
https://www.tp-link.com/us/business-networking/unmanaged-switch/tl-sg105/
Hope the TP Links work if you have the RBS connected. These have green ethernet features.
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Re: Spanning Tree problem with Orbi RBR50
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