The first thing I would check is the buffer stats on the machines you are using to do the communication. When I'm doing UDP syslog traffic, I have far more issues with the endpoints dropping packets than with the network. David Lang On Mon, 24 Oct 2022, Ricky Mok via Starlink wrote: > Couple plausible reasons that I encountered. > > e.g., the NIC on the host simply went bad. > > The cable (copper) got loose. Dirt may get into the fiber optics port. > > Ricky > > On 10/24/2022 1:13 PM, David Fernández via Starlink wrote: >> Dear participants of this list, >> >> If you had a router that in lab conditions, with Gigabit Ethernet >> interfaces, that losses 1 or 2 out of a few thousands of UDP packets >> of a few hundreds of bytes each one, during a test of 1 minute, at >> only 50 packets/s using iperf2, I am sure that you would investigate >> why, wouldn't you? >> >> Or it is not worth it? Just live with it? >> >> Thank you in advance for any answer! >> >> Regards, >> >> David >> _______________________________________________ >> Starlink mailing list >> Starlink@lists.bufferbloat.net >> https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/starlink > _______________________________________________ > Starlink mailing list > Starlink@lists.bufferbloat.net > https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/starlink >