Windows 7 change MTU

Полезности
Post Reply
camelot
Site Admin
Posts: 99
Joined: Thu 17 Jul, 2008 18:41
Contact:

Windows 7 change MTU

Post by camelot »

Change your MTU under Vista or Windows 7

For some reason that has escaped me Path MTU Discovery in Windows just doesn’t seem to figure out the MTU for a given path (something to do with routers being poorly configured to not respond to ICMP requests). So Windows uses the default. For the most part this doesn’t affect anyone, however if it dos affect you, it really annoys you. Failure of PMTUD will result in some websites not loading correctly, having trouble connecting to normally reliable online services and general Internet weirdness.

The resolution is to set your default MTU to one lower than the Ethernet default of 1500. Here is how:

Step 1: Find your MTU
From an elevated CMD Shell enter the following command:

Code: Select all

netsh interface ipv4 show subinterfaces
You should get something like this

Code: Select all

MTU         MediaSenseState  Bytes In    Bytes Out  Interface
----------  ---------------  ---------   ---------  -------------
4294967295  1                0           13487914   Loopback Pseudo-Interface 1
1500        1                3734493902  282497358  Local Area Connection
If you are using Ethernet cable you will be looking for “Local Area Connection” or “Local Area Connection 2″ (if you happened to plug into the second network port). If you are using Wireless you will be looking for “Wireless Network Connection”. The MTU is in the first column.

Step 2: Find out what it should be

In the CMD shell type:

Code: Select all

ping www.cantreachthissite.com -f -l 1472
The host name should be a site you can not reach, -f marks the packet as one that should not be fragmented the -l 1472 sets the size of the packet (1472 = Ethernet Default MTU – Packet Header, where the Ethernet Default MTU is 1500 and the Packet Header is 28 bytes)

If the packet can’t be sent because it would need to be fragmented you will get something similar to this:

Packet needs to be fragmented but DF set.

Keep trying lower packet sizes by 10 (i.e. -l 1460, 1450, 1440, etc.) until you get a successful ping request. Raise your packet sizes by one until you get a “Packet needs to be fragmented but DF set.”. The last successful value plus 28 will be your MTU value.

In my case a packet size of 1430 succeeds but 1431 fails, so 1430 + 28 = 1458.

Step 3: Set your MTU

Now you have identified the interface you need to change and the ideal MTU for you, now it is time to make the change. Again from an elevated CMD Shell type the following replacing my MTU of 1458 with your own value:

Code: Select all

netsh interface ipv4 set subinterface "Local Area Connection" mtu=1458 store=persistent
Or if you are using a Wireless connection:

Code: Select all

netsh interface ipv4 set subinterface "Wireless Network Connection" mtu=1458 store=persistent
If all has gone well you should have a perfectly working internet connection.
Post Reply