Friday, January 19, 2007

How to increase broadband connection speed in Windows XP/2003?

To speed up the Internet connection speed we need to configure a special buffer in the computer's memory in order to enable it to better deal with interrupts made from the NIC or the USB modem.

This tip is only recommended if you have 256MB RAM or higher.

Step #1 - Identify the IRQ used by the NIC/USB modem

Follow these steps:

  1. Open the System Information tool by running MSINFO32.EXE from the Run command.

  2. Expand System Summary > Hardware Resources > IRQs.

  3. Look for the listing made for your NIC (in my case - a Intel(R) PRO/100+ Management Adapter). Note the IRQ next to the specified line (in my case - IRQ21).

In case of USB modems you will first need to find the right USB device used by your modem. Follow these steps:

  1. Open the Device Manager tool by running DEVMGMT.MSC from the Run command (or by right-clicking My Computer > Hardware tab > Device Manager button).

  2. Scroll down to Universal Serial Bus controllers and expand it.

  3. Right-click the USB Root Hub and select Properties. Note that you might need to do so for all listed USB Root hubs (if there are more than one) in order to find the right one.

  1. In the Power tab, look for your USB ADSL modem.

  2. In the Resources tab look for the assigned IRQ (in this case - IRQ21).

  1. This is the IRQ we're looking for.

Lamer note: IRQs and modem names might vary...

Step #2 - Modify the system.ini file

Follow these steps:

  1. Run SYSEDIT.EXE from the Run command.

  2. Expand the system.ini file window.

  3. Scroll down almost to the end of the file till you find a line called [386enh].

  4. Press Enter to make one blank line, and in that line type

IrqX=4096

where X is the designated IRQ number we found in step #1, in my case it's IRQ21.

Note: This line IS CASE SENSITIVE!!!

  1. Click on the File menu, then choose Save.

  2. Close SYSEDIT and reboot your computer.

Done. Speed improvement will be noticed after the computer reboots.

1 comment:

lmiller7 said...

This is a myth
In Windows 9x the system.ini file was used for important system settings. However, this was never the case for the NT platform. In these systems the system.ini is almost obsolete, being retained only for compatibility with old 16 bit applications. All other settings will be ignored.

From a technical standpoint the setting makes no sense. Buffers are used by devices, not IRQ's. Assigning a buffer to an IRQ would be pointless. You will find no reference to this setting in any Microsoft Documentation.

Larry Miller
Microsoft MCSA