As it stands, your router is not looping back. 3 hops would be normal without loopback… It would hit the gateway, then the ISP, the ISP would then route it back. I am getting 3 hops, first hop is the gateway of the local network, the second and third hop is showing the public ISP IP. I did a traceroute to the public WAN IP and i am getting 3 hops, first hop is the gateway of the local network, the second and third hop is showing the public ISP IP. If NAT loopback is working properly, you will get only one hop. Run a traceroute on your public IP/domain from the client machine.No, I am not using any VPN on the router. Are you using a VPN by any chance? If so, try without VPN.I actually don’t feel like reconfiguring due to the way i set it up with the ISP modem and some changes i have made which i don’t remember… Is it possible to clear the cache through SSH? Asus uses a cache, and that cache may need to be cleared. Try hard resetting the router and then reconfiguring it.No, IPv6 is disabled, i am not sure why the firewall for IPv6 is enabled. Are you using IPv6? You might try disabling it and see what happens.Enable ICMP response from WAN - This can sometimes cause issues with loopback.Keep in mind that you may also be limited by slower switches or computers with slower network cards. My wifi speeds are around 45 for large files. So, my transfer speeds with my wired clients are around 80 megabytes per second for large files. For example, I have a Gigabit backbone, and my Seafile Server is on a standalone Debian server. You are also using a VM, which will also slow you down some. I would also disable NAT Acceleration, as it can interfere with Loopback, and really doesn’t give you much benefit anyway.Īlso, keep in mind that you will have some overhead, and if you are transmitting via wifi, it’s going to be slower than you expect for the internal network. First, I would update to the latest firmware… Then, I would reset the router to factory defaults, and then reconfigure it, enabling NAT Loopback along the way. However, with your model, ASUS has had some problems with it which they fixed with a firmware update. Modifying my HOSTS file didn't help and that's about the extent of my networking knowledge.I just checked… It appears you can enable it and disable it in the router settings. It just drops the packets and doesn't connect because I'm trying to call the external IP of the gateway from inside the gateway. The problem is that I can't resolve names for or to pass server name to the Apache virtual hosts file. DNS at domain registrar for and both point to 75.x.x.xįrom the LAN (192.168.101, for example) I can browse to 192.168.2.2 and pull up the default localhost Wampserver page. Running Apache Wampserver with virtual hosts set for and WAN set to Static IP of the gateway's public address: 75.x.x.x NAT/Gaming tab set to forward ports 80 and 443 to the web server Port 2 goes to a Windows 2019 web server at 192.168.2.2 (static) IP-Passthrough > DHCPS-fixed > MAC address of router Port 1 goes to my Asus RT-AC88U (running Merlin 384.19) I suppose this is some kind of NAT loopback problem, but I'm clueless as to how to fix it.ĪT&T 1GB ftth with Arris BGW210-700 gateway:
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