Dilemma de la perte de paquetage Un problème lié à la gestion des données lors du transfert.
Dilemma de la perte de paquetage Un problème lié à la gestion des données lors du transfert.
Hi, I'm dealing with a puzzling issue on my computer. It's experiencing significant data loss when sending packets to all servers and local IPs. This has been happening for about a week now, even though I recently forced an update to Windows 10 Enterprise 1803. The problem started after the update, but it didn't fully resolve. My network adapter is an Intel I219v, connected via a Cat6a cable to a Netgear Prosafe switch. Initially, I thought a simple restart would fix it, but that didn’t work. I suspect the issue might be related to hardware on the PC itself, as other devices on the same cable are functioning properly. I’ve tried disabling certain settings like IPv6 and checking checksum offloading for both TCP and UDP, which slightly improved the situation—packet loss dropped from 25-30% to 1-6%, with spikes reaching up to 10% during heavy CPU usage. In summary, there’s a lot of incoming data loss coming from every server I’ve tested, likely due to software or client-side hardware problems. Anyone have suggestions on how to troubleshoot this? If nothing helps, I might need to reinstall Windows, as I’m also facing some odd HDMI audio issues with this machine. More details: i5-6600K, Gigabyte Z170X-UD3 board, 16 GB RAM, AMD R9 290 GPU (believed), and Cat6a connection.
It functions well now but last week there were some issues. You're correct, a little extra information shouldn't cause problems.
Nothing I'm familiar with except possibly a Windows update. I've installed a new GPU driver because the one on this machine is heavily modified by ASUS and doesn't run directly from AMD well. Even though it's an Enterprise OS, some updates still appear without warning, so I might need to check the logs. I also plan to try forcing an update since 1803 feels outdated. I'm not sure why the regular update process isn't available.
Lately there hasn’t been much new, I usually don’t save Windows because I have to replace it every few years. Still, if it was an update I overlooked, maybe a system-made version could work.
We could definitely duplicate it to ensure backup and get everything fully set up if you have the time.
I thought maybe someone could help simplify the issue. If it's a faulty NIC, swapping parts is necessary before reinstalling to clear old driver remnants. Usually I perform a gradual image check of my boot drive after installing all drivers to confirm everything works correctly, then proceed without updating out of convenience.