Panja 2 Posted ... I signed up for a trial and followed this guide: https://nguvu.org/pfsense/pfsense-baseline-setup/ Any tips how to increase speeds with my pfSense install? I have a 250/25mbit connection and I cannot get past the 150 download. I have tried several NL servers. Share this post Link to post
Air4141841 25 Posted ... what kind of hardware do you have if your at that speeds you sound like you are using higher send and receive buffers. thats a good start Share this post Link to post
go558a83nk 364 Posted ... you need to try different datacenters for different routes. all the NL servers are in the same datacenter I think. Does your CPU support AES-NI? Share this post Link to post
Panja 2 Posted ... My pfSense box has the following hardware: Processor: i5-5250U (2C, 4T) Ram: 8GB ram AES-NI CPU Crypto: Yes (active) Hardware crypto: AES-CBC,AES-XTS,AES-GCM,AES-ICM I will have a look with different servers and diffenct DC's. I will test some more! Share this post Link to post
Panja 2 Posted ... On 11/30/2019 at 1:08 PM, Air4141841 said: what kind of hardware do you have if your at that speeds you sound like you are using higher send and receive buffers. thats a good start What size do you suggest? I'm already using 512KB. The problem seems to be always happening in the evening hours (CET). Just tried 3 of the recommended (server status page) servers in NL and all give me max 30mbit. On my laptop without AirVPN I'm hitting 250mbit without problems. Share this post Link to post
go558a83nk 364 Posted ... 3 minutes ago, Panja said: What size do you suggest? I'm already using 512KB. The problem seems to be always happening in the evening hours (CET). Just tried 3 of the recommended (server status page) servers in NL and all give me max 30mbit. On my laptop without AirVPN I'm hitting 250mbit without problems. quit trying the same NL datacenter. obviously your route is poor and is especially congested during peak hours (evening). try other datacenters. Share this post Link to post
Panja 2 Posted ... Ok, I will try others. But shouldn't the route be better if the DC is close by instead of further away? Share this post Link to post
go558a83nk 364 Posted ... 13 minutes ago, Panja said: Ok, I will try others. But shouldn't the route be better if the DC is close by instead of further away? it could be that the route is overloaded or your ISP has poor bandwidth to whatever intermediate network(s) is used. 1 Panja reacted to this Share this post Link to post
Panja 2 Posted ... I see! Thanks for clearing that up. I've tried a BE server now and getting better speeds. Share this post Link to post
OpenSourcerer 1441 Posted ... 17 minutes ago, Panja said: But shouldn't the route be better if the DC is close by instead of further away? On the internet we're all interconnected by fiber. If you let light carry your messages, it will travel with light speed obviously. The only problem are all the devices in between, routing and switching: They delay it, sometimes by quite a bit. In general, but only in general, the farther you and your destination are located, the more of these devices you might need to traverse. BUT, these devices are usually strong backbones who can handle a tremendous amount of data, so sometimes you might even have a better connection to a server a bit farther away, just like I experienced a few years ago in Germany connecting to Switzerland. These router interconnections are happening on the basis of agreements between organizations or other entities who are in control of certain Autonomous Systems, or AS. Between those AS, there are two kinds of agreements: Transmit and Peering. While you pay a usually better connected AS owner than yourself to forward your traffic, peering is done mutually with lower cost, i.e., both agree to forward the other's traffic - and they publically make it known. Hence, they are publically viewable, for example on HE's BGP toolkit. While this is not the Holy Grail (it certainly has it's weaknesses), it gives a much better idea of how well you are connected to certain servers. So when I started making sure the servers I connect to have a direct BGP route to the AS of AirVPN's servers, throughput problems were rarely seen, even if it meant to connect to Switzerland instead of Frankfurt (which is nearer to my physical location). Also what can happen with geographically closer servers is that an ISP in Germany for example might route traffic through a US east coast server because it's cheaper, less loaded or simply because the ISP doesn't "trust" the only big peering provider in Germany he has an agreement with (= ranks it down or so). The BGP toolkit can uncover this to some extent. Routing outside your ISP is quite a stage for politics. 1 Panja reacted to this Hide OpenSourcerer's signature Hide all signatures NOT AN AIRVPN TEAM MEMBER. USE TICKETS FOR PROFESSIONAL SUPPORT. LZ1's New User Guide to AirVPN « Plenty of stuff for advanced users, too! Want to contact me directly? All relevant methods are on my About me page. Share this post Link to post
Panja 2 Posted ... That's a great write up! Many thanks. It makes things clearer to me. The only "problem" I'm facing now is that my clients/users are now in BE. So for instance Google gives results for BE websites. Of course this is a layer 8 problem. 😉 But I will have to explain wife and kids how to use it. 1 OpenSourcerer reacted to this Share this post Link to post