Changing Windows MTU: Difference between revisions
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The MTU (Maximum Transmission Unit) is the size of the largest network packet that can be transferred in a single network transmission without any fragmentation happening. |
The MTU (Maximum Transmission Unit) is the size of the largest network packet that can be transferred in a single network transmission without any fragmentation happening. |
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We have a separate page on testing your |
We have a separate page on testing your [[MTU]]. |
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Sometimes you may have a reason to change the MTU on your windows computer. Here is how. |
Sometimes you may have a reason to change the MTU on your windows computer. Here is how. |
Revision as of 12:18, 16 Haziran 2023
The MTU (Maximum Transmission Unit) is the size of the largest network packet that can be transferred in a single network transmission without any fragmentation happening.
We have a separate page on testing your MTU.
Sometimes you may have a reason to change the MTU on your windows computer. Here is how.
We will show you how to show the existing MTU, and then how to change it, and then how to revert it back to what it was originally. We're using Windows 10 in this example.
1. Open Command Prompt, as Administrator
- Click
start
- Type
cmd
- On the Right hand side, click
'Run as administrator'
2. Show the current MTU and the interface name
- Enter in the command:
netsh interface ipv4 show subinterfaces
- Make a note of the existing MTU (probably
1500
) - Make a note of the interface name - eg
Ethernet
3. Change the MTU for the interface
- Enter the command:
netsh
- Then:
interface
Then: ipv4
Then: set subinterface "Ethernet" mtu=1320
Then: exit
5. Check the MTU
- Run the first command to show the Interface details again:
netsh interface ipv4 show subinterfaces
- It should now show
1320
6. Reverting back
- Restarting the computer should change the MTU back to default
- Or, you can run the commands above, but set
1500
instead of1320
7. Keeping the MTU change permanent
If you want to keep thje lower MTU even after a reboot, then re-run the commands, but when you come to change the MTU add store=persistent
to the command.
eg set subinterface "Ethernet" mtu=1320 store=persistent