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Showing content with the highest reputation on 07/15/23 in all areas

  1. 3 points
    Hello! We're glad to inform you that all VPN servers are now connected to 1 Gbit/s or 10 Gbit/s full duplex lines and their hardware can use the full available bandwidth, even thanks to software optimization, load balancing and widespread WireGuard usage. To reflect project completion we have modified the real time servers monitor accordingly. https://airvpn.org/status The displayed throughput is again the sum of the total throughput (up+down bandwidth) as usual, but the total available bandwidth is the total up+down bandwidth which the server is, from now on, really capable to use. As usual, if you need a more detailed overview, including stats, history and distinction of up and down bandwidth, you can click the server name. Kind regards & datalove AirVPN Staff
  2. 1 point
    I typically connect to a server located in the Netherlands. I recently find that certain servers can't even reach the website forcing me to switch to another. I check to see if the site is down of course,confirming the site is in fact up. Example being earlier I tried to reach rapidgator.net through Alshat and had no success. I switched to Subra and was able to access it. Could someone check into this?
  3. 1 point
    Wouldnt it be better to stick to fullduplex throuput? One Server with 1G can push 1G to a client, not 2G, i mean.. yes.. if you account it as halfduplex, but thats a really odd messurement to use IMHO.
  4. 1 point
    Staff

    ANSWERED Congested Canadian Servers

    Hello! The migration to 1 Gbit/s full duplex lines is complete. Now all servers are on 1 or 10 Gbit/s lines full duplex AND the new hardware is not a bottleneck. We have updated the real time servers monitor accordingly. Expansion plans in Canada are approved, stay tuned. Behind the scenes a lot of work is ongoing and you can see the outcome now: in various areas the available bandwidth has been physically doubled. More to come in the near future. Please consider that recently a couple of VPN competitors went bankrupt, another one was bought by a big shady group (causing widespread customers' migration), and a couple of other relevant VPN services suddenly canceled an essential service that we routinely offer, pushing a massive amount of customers to leave. All such events occurred in a very short time span, so distinct migration waves overlapped. Nothing that we can't handle anyway, because the infrastructure was oversized. Please follow the "News" forum for updates and announcements. Thank you all for your choice! Kind regards
  5. 1 point
    I doubt it. Stuff like this happens whether connected through AirVPN or not. You would need to gather and provide far more detailed information than you have for anyone to take any notice unless it happens all the time to everyone
  6. 1 point
    Staff

    Using AirVPN with Linux from Terminal

    Download your configuration file from the page Config Generator. If you don't already have the OpenVPN package installed in your system, you can tick Advanced Mode and tick Bundle executable (only for x86/amd64 based systems). Have a look here to take care of DNS push (OpenVPN will not do that for you by default): https://airvpn.org/topic/9608-how-to-accept-dns-push-on-linux-systems-with-resolvconf/Open a terminal console, reach the directory where you stored the files generated by the Configuration Generator and launchsudo openvpn foo.ovpnif you already have installed the OpenVPN package, orsudo ./openvpn foo.ovpnif you have downloaded our bundled executable. foo.ovpn is any *.ovpn files generated by the Config Generator. In the example we report "sudo" to run OpenVPN with root privileges. In some systems you might not have "sudo" available, or your account might be not included in the "sudo-ers". In these cases, you just need to run a terminal as root, or become root with "su" command.
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