This is what my log stated when it went down.... does this make any sense?Euh .... check logs ?? Interface / PPPoE "flapping" ?
You could also configure "netwatch" and perform ping to the next-hop (= ISP equipment) so that could reveal something too.
"Dropping Internet" could also be caused by DNS resolution failures ect,etc.
What did you investigate yourself already ?
Post actual configuration ... run /export hide-sensitive file=anynameyouwish, fetch file, open it in text editor and redact any remaining sensitive information (such as serial number, any wireless passwords, public IP addresses) and paste it here.
Ok port 2 is my laptop connected via ethernet cable and I have changed out the cables and get same issue... so I need to check drivers on Laptop?Either your WAN port is eth2 or your pc/whatever other hardware is connected to eth2. In case of the latter, you might want to check network interface drivers and cabling.Post actual configuration ... run /export hide-sensitive file=anynameyouwish, fetch file, open it in text editor and redact any remaining sensitive information (such as serial number, any wireless passwords, public IP addresses) and paste it here.
What drivers am I looking for because in computer management I haven't found any issues. I'm using Windows 10 on that laptop.Either your WAN port is eth2 or your pc/whatever other hardware is connected to eth2. In case of the latter, you might want to check network interface drivers and cabling.Post actual configuration ... run /export hide-sensitive file=anynameyouwish, fetch file, open it in text editor and redact any remaining sensitive information (such as serial number, any wireless passwords, public IP addresses) and paste it here.