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| Networking with Windows Vista Networking issues and questions with Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.networking_sharing) |
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Hi all, first thanks for taking the time to read this.
I need to connect to a remote server running Windows Server 2003 Web Edition from my machine. Used to have no problem from WinXP(SP2), but since clean-installing Vista, I am having difficulties: I am using the same wireless connection and network/router I used under XP, and get sustained WAN rates of 3-4Mbps; I can use Remote desktop to connect to the server without error messages, but it is slow slow slow. I mean two minutes for the desktop icons to come through the pipe. Typing a sentence takes 20-30seconds to show up on the screen, etc. If I use GoToMyPC to access a remote machine running WinXP, then use THAT remote desktop to connect to my server, then I can rock and roll -- it is actually x-times faster to go through two remote machines using two services. Which tells me the issue is prbably some sort of setting. I have tried all various combinations of user settings under the RD connection, but to no avail. I read somewhere that changing UDP size settings works, but I have no clue how to do that. Sorry in advance if I should be including some information that I am not -- clearly I am an idiot already for having to ask for help -- please don't expect too much from me. Thanks in advance for any information or assistance you can provide, Shannon |
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Does it run normal after logon?
Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Shannon" wrote in message ... Hi all, first thanks for taking the time to read this. I need to connect to a remote server running Windows Server 2003 Web Edition from my machine. Used to have no problem from WinXP(SP2), but since clean-installing Vista, I am having difficulties: I am using the same wireless connection and network/router I used under XP, and get sustained WAN rates of 3-4Mbps; I can use Remote desktop to connect to the server without error messages, but it is slow slow slow. I mean two minutes for the desktop icons to come through the pipe. Typing a sentence takes 20-30seconds to show up on the screen, etc. If I use GoToMyPC to access a remote machine running WinXP, then use THAT remote desktop to connect to my server, then I can rock and roll -- it is actually x-times faster to go through two remote machines using two services. Which tells me the issue is prbably some sort of setting. I have tried all various combinations of user settings under the RD connection, but to no avail. I read somewhere that changing UDP size settings works, but I have no clue how to do that. Sorry in advance if I should be including some information that I am not -- clearly I am an idiot already for having to ask for help -- please don't expect too much from me. Thanks in advance for any information or assistance you can provide, Shannon |
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Is it an RDP problem or a Vista problem? Your post doesn't make it clear.
How does RDP (not gotomypc) work from XP? -- Kerry Brown Microsoft MVP - Shell/User http://www.vistahelp.ca "Shannon" wrote in message ... Hi all, first thanks for taking the time to read this. I need to connect to a remote server running Windows Server 2003 Web Edition from my machine. Used to have no problem from WinXP(SP2), but since clean-installing Vista, I am having difficulties: I am using the same wireless connection and network/router I used under XP, and get sustained WAN rates of 3-4Mbps; I can use Remote desktop to connect to the server without error messages, but it is slow slow slow. I mean two minutes for the desktop icons to come through the pipe. Typing a sentence takes 20-30seconds to show up on the screen, etc. If I use GoToMyPC to access a remote machine running WinXP, then use THAT remote desktop to connect to my server, then I can rock and roll -- it is actually x-times faster to go through two remote machines using two services. Which tells me the issue is prbably some sort of setting. I have tried all various combinations of user settings under the RD connection, but to no avail. I read somewhere that changing UDP size settings works, but I have no clue how to do that. Sorry in advance if I should be including some information that I am not -- clearly I am an idiot already for having to ask for help -- please don't expect too much from me. Thanks in advance for any information or assistance you can provide, Shannon |
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Kerry,
Quite right -- babbling with the sleepless insanity of a long-overdue "full re-install" -- my apologies. RDP worked like a charm under XP -- that's what has me flummoxed (you know you are sleep deprived when you actually think to use words like that). So I am faced with: 1) Worked great under RDP/XP on this machine and from this network location yesterday 2) Still works great from GoToMyPC through another XP box, and from the XP ox at the office 3) General WAN throughput has been fast from this machine since the Vista install, and 4) Other "atypical" WAN porting connctions (scan retreival, printing, etc) are not noticeably slower at all I tried TS Gateway on, off, and auto -- all worked but all were slow. I don't really know if a gateway would make that much of a difference, but hey -- it said "Advanced," so I had to screw with it. Thanks for taking the time to respond, and in advance again for any insight you may have. Shannon On Tue, 13 Feb 2007 10:49:24 -0800, "Kerry Brown" *a*m wrote: Is it an RDP problem or a Vista problem? Your post doesn't make it clear. How does RDP (not gotomypc) work from XP? |
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Bob,
It is slow from startup to shutdown -- almost as though that port were being limited to like 4,800 baud. I fired up an XP test install I have on a USB external, and it worked great from this machine, NIC, etc -- so everything in my little brain is polarized toward something in Vista, but I'll be darned if I can figure out what -- nothing else I can find in any of the network connections I have is impacted like that. Thanks again for your help and any thoughts you may have, Shannon On Tue, 13 Feb 2007 10:49:17 -0600, "Robert L [MVP - Networking]" wrote: Does it run normal after logon? Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Shannon" wrote in message ... Hi all, first thanks for taking the time to read this. I need to connect to a remote server running Windows Server 2003 Web Edition from my machine. Used to have no problem from WinXP(SP2), but since clean-installing Vista, I am having difficulties: I am using the same wireless connection and network/router I used under XP, and get sustained WAN rates of 3-4Mbps; I can use Remote desktop to connect to the server without error messages, but it is slow slow slow. I mean two minutes for the desktop icons to come through the pipe. Typing a sentence takes 20-30seconds to show up on the screen, etc. If I use GoToMyPC to access a remote machine running WinXP, then use THAT remote desktop to connect to my server, then I can rock and roll -- it is actually x-times faster to go through two remote machines using two services. Which tells me the issue is prbably some sort of setting. I have tried all various combinations of user settings under the RD connection, but to no avail. I read somewhere that changing UDP size settings works, but I have no clue how to do that. Sorry in advance if I should be including some information that I am not -- clearly I am an idiot already for having to ask for help -- please don't expect too much from me. Thanks in advance for any information or assistance you can provide, Shannon |
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I use RDP a lot managing servers on contract. I don't notice any difference
in speed between XP and Vista. It must be something peculiar to your system or network. Is the host on your internal network or is it external? Have you tried a wired connection with the same computer? This will eliminate a flakey NIC driver. What are the the models of the NIC, wireless access point, router, firewalls. and any switches. Have you tried turning off the auto-tuning for the TCP/IP receive window. Use the following command. netsh interface tcp set global autotuninglevel=disabled and to re-enable it netsh interface tcp set global autotuninglevel=normal In some cases you may need to use this command in combination with the above netsh interface tcp set global rss=disabled If turning off the auto-tuning works then something on your network doesn't support this feature which is too bad because it can really speed up things over time. -- Kerry Brown Microsoft MVP - Shell/User http://www.vistahelp.ca "Shannon" wrote in message ... Kerry, Quite right -- babbling with the sleepless insanity of a long-overdue "full re-install" -- my apologies. RDP worked like a charm under XP -- that's what has me flummoxed (you know you are sleep deprived when you actually think to use words like that). So I am faced with: 1) Worked great under RDP/XP on this machine and from this network location yesterday 2) Still works great from GoToMyPC through another XP box, and from the XP ox at the office 3) General WAN throughput has been fast from this machine since the Vista install, and 4) Other "atypical" WAN porting connctions (scan retreival, printing, etc) are not noticeably slower at all I tried TS Gateway on, off, and auto -- all worked but all were slow. I don't really know if a gateway would make that much of a difference, but hey -- it said "Advanced," so I had to screw with it. Thanks for taking the time to respond, and in advance again for any insight you may have. Shannon On Tue, 13 Feb 2007 10:49:24 -0800, "Kerry Brown" *a*m wrote: Is it an RDP problem or a Vista problem? Your post doesn't make it clear. How does RDP (not gotomypc) work from XP? |
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Thanks Kerry -- that worked like a charm. At this point, I don't care
about being faster in the future -- I am just glad to be functional today. Whoo-Hoo! Thanks again!! On Tue, 13 Feb 2007 21:53:35 -0800, "Kerry Brown" *a*m wrote: I use RDP a lot managing servers on contract. I don't notice any difference in speed between XP and Vista. It must be something peculiar to your system or network. Is the host on your internal network or is it external? Have you tried a wired connection with the same computer? This will eliminate a flakey NIC driver. What are the the models of the NIC, wireless access point, router, firewalls. and any switches. Have you tried turning off the auto-tuning for the TCP/IP receive window. Use the following command. netsh interface tcp set global autotuninglevel=disabled and to re-enable it netsh interface tcp set global autotuninglevel=normal In some cases you may need to use this command in combination with the above netsh interface tcp set global rss=disabled If turning off the auto-tuning works then something on your network doesn't support this feature which is too bad because it can really speed up things over time. |
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Glad to hear it worked.
-- Kerry Brown Microsoft MVP - Shell/User http://www.vistahelp.ca "Shannon" wrote in message ... Thanks Kerry -- that worked like a charm. At this point, I don't care about being faster in the future -- I am just glad to be functional today. Whoo-Hoo! Thanks again!! On Tue, 13 Feb 2007 21:53:35 -0800, "Kerry Brown" *a*m wrote: I use RDP a lot managing servers on contract. I don't notice any difference in speed between XP and Vista. It must be something peculiar to your system or network. Is the host on your internal network or is it external? Have you tried a wired connection with the same computer? This will eliminate a flakey NIC driver. What are the the models of the NIC, wireless access point, router, firewalls. and any switches. Have you tried turning off the auto-tuning for the TCP/IP receive window. Use the following command. netsh interface tcp set global autotuninglevel=disabled and to re-enable it netsh interface tcp set global autotuninglevel=normal In some cases you may need to use this command in combination with the above netsh interface tcp set global rss=disabled If turning off the auto-tuning works then something on your network doesn't support this feature which is too bad because it can really speed up things over time. |
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