When a host (usually a PC) initiates a TCP session with a server, it
negotiates the IP segment size by using the MSS option field in the TCP
SYN packet. The value of the MSS field is determined by the maximum
transmission unit (MTU) configuration on the host. The default MSS value
for a PC is 1500 bytes.
The PPP over Ethernet (PPPoE) standard supports a MTU of only 1492
bytes. The disparity between the host and PPPoE MTU size can cause the
router in between the host and the server to drop 1500-byte packets and
terminate TCP sessions over the PPPoE network. Even if the path MTU
(which detects the correct MTU across the path) is enabled on the host,
sessions may be dropped because system administrators sometimes disable
the ICMP error messages that must be relayed from the host in order for
path MTU to work.
The ip tcp adjust-mss command helps prevent TCP sessions from being dropped by adjusting the MSS value of the TCP SYN packets.
The ip tcp adjust-mss command is effective only for TCP connections passing through the router.
In most cases, the optimum value for the max-segment-size
argument is 1452 bytes. This value plus the 20-byte IP header, the
20-byte TCP header, and the 8-byte PPPoE header add up to a 1500-byte
packet that matches the MTU size for the Ethernet link.
If you are configuring the ip mtu command on the same interface as the ip tcp adjust-mss command, it is recommended that you use the following commands and values:
•ip tcp adjust-mss 1452
•ip mtu 1492
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