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The Graveyard - Products No Longer Supported => Routers / COVR => DIR-890L => Topic started by: Vigilante on October 22, 2015, 10:03:19 AM

Title: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: Vigilante on October 22, 2015, 10:03:19 AM
Maybe ISP grading rating.  ::)

Guessing so  :)

I've found a few interesting details regarding what the MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY is reporting (SCAN feature) vs D-LINK DIR-890L settings / D-LINK DIR-868L settings.

1)  WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY is reporting the DIR-890L PROTOCOL for 2.4GHz to be '802.11b/g/n', when I have it set to only 'Mixed 802.11g/n'
2)  WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY is reporting the DIR-890L PROTOCOL for 5GHz to be '802.11ac', when I have it set to only 'Mixed 802.11n/ac' (Primary 5GHz)
3)  WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY is reporting the DIR-890L PROTOCOL for 5GHz to be '802.11ac', when I have it set to only 'Mixed 802.11n/ac' (Secondary 5GHz)
3)  WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY is reporting the DIR-868L PROTOCOL for 2.4GHz to be '802.11n', when I have it set to only 'Mixed 802.11n/g'
4)  WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY is reporting the DIR-868L PROTOCOL for 5GHz to be '802.11ac', when I have it set to only 'Mixed 802.11ac/n'

I'm not sure if this is something in regards to both routers, or perhaps the Mac WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY (SCAN feature) not correctly reporting the "actual" protocols.  Either way, I thought posting this might trigger some discussion.  I did run inSSIDer (yep, still have it for Mac) and unfortunately, that doesn't provide the protocol  >:(


Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: FurryNutz on October 22, 2015, 10:09:36 AM
What happens if you set single mode G or N on 2.4Ghz and single A mode or N mode on 5Ghz?

Hook up your 5500 or 4500 and set single mode N on both radios and test. Just turn it on and configure. No need to connect it up as a main host router. You might disable the Other wifi radios temporarily while testing the 5500/4500.

Do you have a Windows PC? if so you might try Acrylic wifi scanner. Do a search on that name. Also for Mac there is Sumbler as well. I think it sees AC mode.
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: Vigilante on October 22, 2015, 10:35:54 AM
What happens if you set single mode G or N on 2.4Ghz and single A mode or N mode on 5Ghz?

Still Incorrect - WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY is reporting the DIR-890L PROTOCOL for 2.4GHz to be '802.11b/g/n', when I have it set to only 'Mixed 802.11n'
Correct - WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY is reporting the DIR-890L PROTOCOL for 5GHz to be '802.11a', when I have it set to only 'Mixed 802.11a' (Primary 5GHz)
Correct - WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY is reporting the DIR-890L PROTOCOL for 5GHz to be '802.11a', when I have it set to only 'Mixed 802.11a' (Secondary 5GHz)
Correct - WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY is reporting the DIR-868L PROTOCOL for 2.4GHz to be '802.11n', when I have it set to only 'Mixed 802.11n'
Incorrect - WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY is reporting the DIR-868L PROTOCOL for 5GHz to be '802.11ac', when I have it set to only 'Mixed 802.11n'

Incorrect - WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY is reporting the DIR-890L PROTOCOL for 5GHz to be '802.11a/n', when I have it set to only 'Mixed 802.11n' (Primary 5GHz)
Incorrect - WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY is reporting the DIR-890L PROTOCOL for 5GHz to be '802.11a/n', when I have it set to only 'Mixed 802.11n' (Secondary 5GHz)
Incorrect - WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY is reporting the DIR-868L PROTOCOL for 2.4GHz to be '802.11b/g', when I have it set to only 'Mixed 802.11g'
Cannot set DIR-890L to 'g' only in 2.4GHz
Cannot set DIR-868L to 'n' only in 5GHz

Not sure what is going on here...... ???

Do you have a Windows PC? if so you might try Acrylic wifi scanner. Do a search on that name. Also for Mac there is Sumbler as well. I think it sees AC mode.

I don't have a Windows PC  ::)
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: FurryNutz on October 22, 2015, 11:02:47 AM
Possible that the app is reading the capabilities of the router entirely or the app is not reading the modes correctly or the router is responding incorrectly.

Can you test on the 5500 and 4500 and see?
See if you can find Stumbler for Mac.
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: Vigilante on October 22, 2015, 11:16:30 AM
See if you can find Stumbler for Mac.

Found, downloaded, and installed iStumbler for Mac.  It actually provides MORE information than the Mac Wireless Diagnostic Utility.

Unfortunately, I'm seeing the exact same results reported in the iStumbler app as I was in the Mac Wireless Diagnostic Utility app [in regards to incorrect PROTOCOLS being reported vs what is set within the router(s)]  ???

Can you test on the 5500 and 4500 and see?

I will test with the 5500 and see what both iStumbler and the Mac Wireless Diagnostic Utility app report....stay tuned  :)  Any chance of contacting D-LInk and see what they say about the issue?
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: FurryNutz on October 22, 2015, 11:39:49 AM
Let us know. I will.
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: FurryNutz on October 22, 2015, 11:58:44 AM
Also, to see what the Mac is actually connecting at, hold down the Opt button then left or right click on the Wifi signal icon on the top tool bar. This will reveal more info. Check the connection rate for single modes on each mode and see what the Mac is connecting at. ###mb is what your looking for.
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: Vigilante on October 22, 2015, 12:19:54 PM
Also, to see what the Mac is actually connecting at, hold down the Opt button then left or right click on the Wifi signal icon on the top tool bar. This will reveal more info. Check the connection rate for single modes on each mode and see what the Mac is connecting at. ###mb is what your looking for.

I'm assuming this is the info you were referring to.....  ;)

27" Apple iMac - Wi-Fi connection
Active PHY Mode - 802.11ac
Quality - Excellent
RSSI - -66dBm
Noise - -101dBm (interestingly, SCAN shows '0' for noise)
Tx Rate - 351Mbps
Channel - 44
Channel Band - 5 GHz
Channel Width - 80 MHz

 ::) I actually realized I didn't have CHANNEL WIDTH set to Auto 20/40/80 MHz after troubleshooting the different settings  ::)  The above info was edited after resetting CHANNEL WIDTH and obtaining new INFO from the Mac WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY

15" Apple MBP - Wi-Fi connection
Active PHY Mode - 802.11ac
Quality - Excellent
RSSI - -45dBm
Noise - -95dBm (interestingly, SCAN shows '0' for noise)
Tx Rate - 600Mbps
Channel - 44
Channel Band - 5 GHz
Channel Width - 80 MHz
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: FurryNutz on October 22, 2015, 12:38:15 PM
Ok, now set single mode g on 2.4Ghz and A on 5Ghz and report your findings...
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: Vigilante on October 22, 2015, 12:50:42 PM
Ok, now set single mode g on 2.4Ghz and A on 5Ghz and report your findings...

27" Apple iMac - Wi-Fi connection
Active PHY Mode - 802.11a
Quality - Excellent
RSSI - -66dBm
Noise - -99dBm (interestingly, SCAN shows '0' for noise)
Tx Rate - 48Mbps
Channel - 44
Channel Band - 5 GHz
Channel Width - 20 MHz

The D-Link DIR-890L does not have 'single g mode' for 2.4GHz (only n, g/n, b/g/n)
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: FurryNutz on October 22, 2015, 12:52:42 PM
So when using A mode, is this the same result seen in the two apps?

Then set G/N mode on 2.4Ghz.

The higher number for Dbm the lower the noise.
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: Vigilante on October 22, 2015, 01:03:37 PM
So when using A mode, is this the same result seen in the two apps?

Then set G/N mode on 2.4Ghz.

The higher number for Dbm the lower the noise.

My only option was to set 'g/n' mode  :). Both apps [Wireless Diagnostic Utility and iStumbler] reported the same result using 'a' mode.
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: Vigilante on October 22, 2015, 01:08:41 PM
What's "odd" is both apps report consistent / same results for both DIR-890L and DIR-868L.  Maybe I shouldn't have noticed / come across  this issue  :-\
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: FurryNutz on October 22, 2015, 01:31:35 PM
And setting G/N mode on 2.4Ghz, what do all three apps report? same thing?
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: Vigilante on October 22, 2015, 01:39:41 PM
And setting G/N mode on 2.4Ghz, what do all three apps report? same thing?

Yes.  Both iStumbler and the Mac Wireless Diagnostic Utility report the same results.
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: FurryNutz on October 22, 2015, 01:44:44 PM
modes G/N are seen?
How about the 3rd app? Opt click on WiFi icon?
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: Vigilante on October 22, 2015, 01:54:21 PM
modes G/N are seen?
How about the 3rd app? Opt click on WiFi icon?

Still Incorrect - WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY is reporting the DIR-890L PROTOCOL for 2.4GHz to be '802.11b/g/n', when I have it set to only 'Mixed 802.11g/n'

I've only been using two apps (iStumbler / Mac Wireless Diagnostic Utility - Scan).  I check the INFO on both the iStumbler app and the Mac Diagnostic Utility app.  The Mac Diagnostic Utility app has several options when selecting WINDOW - top left menu bar (Assistant / Info / Logs / Scan / Performance / Sniffer / Monitor)
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: FurryNutz on October 22, 2015, 01:56:25 PM
Please include the Opt click on WiFi icon results as well so we can compare all 3 apps. The Opt click on WiFi icon info should either be the same or differ from the other two apps.
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: Vigilante on October 22, 2015, 02:38:30 PM
Please include the Opt click on WiFi icon results as well so we can compare all 3 apps. The Opt click on WiFi icon info should either be the same or differ from the other two apps.

The 'option' click on Wi-Fi icon provides the exact same info as the Mac Wireless Diagnostic Utility.  I'm assuming 'option' click / Wi-Fi icon is just a "quick view" of INFO instead of having to open the Mac Wireless Diagnostic Utility and selecting INFO  ;)
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: FurryNutz on October 22, 2015, 03:21:21 PM
gotcha.  ::)
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: Vigilante on October 22, 2015, 03:51:00 PM
What are you thinking Furry, in regards to this situation.  Do you think it's a "D-Link router" situation, or an "App" issue?  It would be interesting to see INFO from both apps with other router manufacturers.  I may not be able to test the 5500 until tomorrow sometime.  It's currently set as an AP, so it won't be a problem to connect to the 890L and test.
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: FurryNutz on October 22, 2015, 03:52:31 PM
Not sure. Anything is possible. I've passed this on to D-Link for review. Hope we might get some feed back.
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: Vigilante on October 22, 2015, 04:22:46 PM
Not sure. Anything is possible. I've passed this on to D-Link for review. Hope we might get some feed back.

AWESOME!   :)  Keep me updated and let me know if I need to try additional troubleshooting. 
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: Vigilante on October 22, 2015, 04:36:20 PM
I just looked at other networks around my neighborhood with the Mac Wireless Diagnostic Utility (Scan feature).  I don't know what their "mode" settings are, but I'm seeing the same type of results for 2.4 GHz networks (b/g/n) and 5GHz networks (n/ac). 

One thing I noticed, is my HP Laser Jet Pro 200 printer (M276nw) shows the following INFO in the Mac Wireless Network Utility:
Protocol - 802.11b/g
Quality - N/A
RSSI - -64dBm
Noise - 0
Tx Rate - N/A
Channel - 3
Channel Band - 2.4 GHz
Channel Width - 20 MHz

Not sure what to take from this info  ???

Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: FurryNutz on October 23, 2015, 07:02:09 AM
It almost seems like the scan function is detecting actual supported modes by the product rather then actual connected working mode.  ???
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: BiggShooter on October 23, 2015, 08:44:24 AM
It almost seems like the scan function is detecting actual supported modes by the product rather then actual connected working mode.  ???

I was kind of thinking the same thing.  I'm just a "greenhorn" when it comes to networking and routers  ;)
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: FurryNutz on October 23, 2015, 09:03:13 AM
I figure after all these years knowing you since the 4500 days, you not that much o***reen horn anymore.  ::)
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: BiggShooter on October 23, 2015, 12:45:59 PM
I figure after all these years knowing you since the 4500 days, you not that much o***reen horn anymore.  ::)

 :o Definitely a greenhorn with only 6 posts to date  ;D
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: FurryNutz on October 24, 2015, 10:13:19 AM
But your experiences go way back.  ::)
Title: Re: MAC WIRELESS DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY
Post by: BiggShooter on October 24, 2015, 03:05:33 PM
But your experiences go way back.  ::)

 :D