View Full Version : How do i fucking fix this shit
CYBER
06-28-2014, 12:20 PM
Give it like 20 mins into the demo...
i dnt know what is causing this... it's pissing me off... and it happens ALL the time.
i have a 30mbs internet, an actually good router that cost me 180$, an amazing cyberpower pc...
i dnt even know anymore...
meanwhile. at the bottom of my screen: ...
FUCK... i cant play css with this shit all the time.
SCRIBBLE
06-28-2014, 12:24 PM
talk to your isp about throttling and tell them to fuck right off.
Run tracert gg.ibisgaming.com a few times to see at which point in the pipe the lag is starting.
hoshiro-
06-28-2014, 12:28 PM
try the command net_graph 0
brett friggin favre
06-28-2014, 04:38 PM
try the command net_graph 0
This man is a genius, someone hire him as a lead IT consultant.
CYBER
06-28-2014, 11:48 PM
talk to your isp about throttling and tell them to fuck right off.
I already did, they claim it's not on their end and even came to my house and replaced their modem, some wiring and offered me a new router (even tho mine is still higher end..) ,,,, no results.
As for tracert zero, Passerelli gave me this tool, i tried it and it doesn't go through sometimes, I may not know how to use it properly tho.
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try the command net_graph 0
I should mod kill u on the other thread just because of this.
try the command net_graph 0
hahahaha! Best post on ibis
CYBER
06-29-2014, 04:13 AM
ran the tracerts... many times... this is what i keep getting...
although, i restarted my router and modem AND pc before the last and then it was "ok" for a bit, choppy but not super laggy...
also i ran this at 4 am... not 3 pm when i played last time
LOLOL Still laughing at hoshi's post. Fuckin gold.
I find it a bit strange that you get a request time out on your first hop, that could be where the issue is as that is clearly unique to you and not any other clients. Have you tried to connect your computer directly to the modem.
Unfortunately, non of the tracert you supplied contained the high ping your complaining about. If you do get one that contains high ping you will then instantly know at what point it is occurring. Note that not counting the request time out you enter the data center in 2 hops.
BladeTwinSwords
06-29-2014, 10:33 AM
What I want to know is, who the FUCK puts their graph in the center of their screen.
CYBER
06-29-2014, 10:35 AM
I find it a bit strange that you get a request time out on your first hop, that could be where the issue is as that is clearly unique to you and not any other clients. Have you tried to connect your computer directly to the modem.
Unfortunately, non of the tracert you supplied contained the high ping your complaining about. If you do get one that contains high ping you will then instantly know at what point it is occurring. Note that not counting the request time out you enter the data center in 2 hops.
i will try to run the tracert next time i see INSANE lag (such as in the pics).. it happens randomly and stays for a few days :(
it's like my goddamn computer goes on its period...
that being said, what happens IF i can find the lag source? how could i resolve it then?
also .yes. i tried connecting the computer straight to the modem (which is not easy considering my modem is far away, and i am testing on desktop)...nthn happened
DJ_MikeyRevile
06-29-2014, 11:22 AM
Cyber, use WinMTR. Turn it on and enable and let it run in the back ground.
Do you have dual monitors? If so, drag it to your second monitor and when you experience heavy lag, look at it as it is running and you will be able to find where any packet loss is coming from.
If you dont, minimize your game during high lag and watch.
Basiclly, its a tracert that runs live.
Basically if it does not occur when your connected directly to your modem the problem is caused by something between you and your modem such as a switch or router. The solution then would be to replace the device having issues.
You might want to note room temps. If the issue is on your end and only occurs some times it might be that something like the computer, switch, router or modem is overheating and causing issues. It could even be a voltage irregularity that only occurs when to much power is being used at once like it occurs when your AC kicks on at the same time your playing and using a microwave oven.
The travert results will when we catch where it is let us isolate the problem to know if it really is on your end or not and then find out what on your end is creating the issue.
CYBER
06-30-2014, 04:08 PM
Basically if it does not occur when your connected directly to your modem the problem is caused by something between you and your modem such as a switch or router. The solution then would be to replace the device having issues.
You might want to note room temps. If the issue is on your end and only occurs some times it might be that something like the computer, switch, router or modem is overheating and causing issues. It could even be a voltage irregularity that only occurs when to much power is being used at once like it occurs when your AC kicks on at the same time your playing and using a microwave oven.
The travert results will when we catch where it is let us isolate the problem to know if it really is on your end or not and then find out what on your end is creating the issue.
here's a new file. the % loss at the last line was about 5% when i checked it at first during lag, but over time, it went down to 1%. i dnt know if that's a gd thing or not, or just the fact that i had more up time than lag time, but all i know is that during that entire tracert (mikey i already had that program from pass, and i ran it before, including now), i was lagging during that entire tracert.
The data you provided has declared the issue is caused on your localhost ie your actual computer. According to your data you managed to get 310ping to yourself which should be impossible.
To verify the results run this same test at the same time on a second computer. You will find that the second computer will not experience lag to gg.ibisgaming.com at any time, especially during the time that you do.
Results from that showing that you never got high ping on the second computer while the first computer did will finally isolate the issue 100% to your physical computer.
CYBER
06-30-2014, 06:53 PM
The data you provided has declared the issue is caused on your localhost ie your actual computer. According to your data you managed to get 310ping to yourself which should be impossible.
To verify the results run this same test at the same time on a second computer. You will find that the second computer will not experience lag to gg.ibisgaming.com at any time, especially during the time that you do.
Results from that showing that you never got high ping on the second computer while the first computer did will finally isolate the issue 100% to your physical computer.
so does that mean my desktop's network card is retarded? or something happening software wise?
usually how would u go about resolving this issue?
sorry, i'm know my way around programming, software and pcs ,but networking is literally my kryptonite.
Not sure yet until you verify with a second computer that it 100% is your localhost.
It could be some random ass program lagging it up every so often hitting the network at that time. You could try to install another network card and see if the problem goes away if it does not then the issue is likely some program running on your computer.
You can use the resource monitor to see what processes are using the network in real time. If you have a secondary monitor you might be able to catch if a new program suddenly pops up with activity when the lag is occurring.
Also make sure that your drivers are up to date and if it is a part of your motherboard check if there is a new bios update for your board that may help as well.
kionay
07-01-2014, 07:38 AM
basically what ZERO said, you have to use known good parts
start with a known good computer, one that's never done this (from any source, friend's PC, rent a laptop or something idk idc) and connect it exactly as your current computer, this effectively rules out if it's your comptuer or your network
if that other pc lags it's the network, if not it's your computer
if it's your computer use a known good network card, maybe pick a cheap one up from your local hardware (lol) store (computer store, walmart maybe even?) and plug it in and see if it lags
if it still lags put your old network card back in, there's a teeny tiny chance it's your mobo but pray it's not that or buy a new one or a known good different one that happens to fit all your current hardware (which can sometimes be a pain)
if you try all those and the problem persists it's definitively software related, i'd reccomend shrinking your current harddrive partition and dual-boot another windows or even a version of linux with good generic drivers (or hope the manufacurers of your PC parts were god-tier and are one of the few to make linux drivers) and try again, if the problem goes away then something you've installed or a bad driver is messing you up
if the problem stops after using a known good computer
after using a known good network card
after using a known good motherboard (if you're desperate)
after using a known good(?) operating system
then it's your network, router, switch, ISP is lying to you, idk, one of the above but your PC is a-ok
(?) coz there's always the chance the 'known good' drivers given to you by the manufacturer have issues, nobody is perfect, not even driver developers
troubleshooting local stuff is really pretty simple, just get something you KNOW isn't faulty, either because it's new or you've tested it seperately, replace something in the set of things that could be the problem (even if the set is all items, for some reason) and see if it does or doesn't break
eventually after replacing something in the line of items the problem will be fixed and you'll know what the source was
unless it's 2 things going wrong at the same time, then proceed to put your head in a vice and squeeze :(
DJ_MikeyRevile
07-01-2014, 12:37 PM
Stop dling porn. Problem solved.
I suspect a fualty network card however its more likley a program or malware/virus. Didnt you have this same iasue on your last computer?
Passarelli
07-05-2014, 06:25 PM
Cyber, since your problem is intermittent, a standard tracert likely will not work unless you get very lucky. I'd suggest a 3rd party tool (I suggested pingplotter previously, but anything that works similarly will work) to get usable data. As soon as you start lagging, go out and see what the tool says. You want to look for where the dropped packets or very high ping hops are. If the tool doesn't show anything usable, it is likely on your end.
Hopefully your ISP will actually help you out when you figure out where the issue is. Between 4 and 11 P.M. my ISP decides to send my traffic through CO to get to DC and effectively doubles to triples my latency. I called them and they told me "there is nothing we can do. We don't guarantee low ping or latency, only the total throughput." Fucking centurylink DSL jackoffs. Sadly there isn't anything else out here I could get. Hopefully I'll be moving soonish to a different part of FL and be able to get decent interwebs.
He already did, we already got back 300ms ping from his local host. IE it takes 300ms for him to ping himself. The issue is with his actual computer.
Passarelli
07-06-2014, 11:06 AM
Wow. Well, in that case reinstalling the drivers for the NIC card might work. If that doesn't solve it, a reformat or buying a new NIC may be in order.
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