Hi,
I have two internet connections from two ISPs. I also have a desktop with two Ethernet ports.
My question: What is the best way to get the maximum out of two internet connections in EL 8 for my desktop?
Thanks
--- Lee
On 15/02/2021 11:30, Thomas Stephen Lee wrote:
Hi,
I have two internet connections from two ISPs. I also have a desktop with two Ethernet ports.
My question: What is the best way to get the maximum out of two internet connections in EL 8 for my desktop?
Thanks
Define maximum.
Are you looking for redundancy / fail-over in the event one connection fails or are you looking to combine throughput for maximum bandwidth?
Hello,
Need a VM somewhere in the clouds but very efficient and achieve redundancy and bandwidth aggregation : MultiPath TCP.
The client part could go only on your desktop but if you want all your devices taking advantages of this system, take a look at https://www.openmptcprouter.com/
Regards, --
On Mon, 15 Feb 2021 at 12:57, Phil Perry pperry@elrepo.org wrote:
On 15/02/2021 11:30, Thomas Stephen Lee wrote:
Hi,
I have two internet connections from two ISPs. I also have a desktop with two Ethernet ports.
My question: What is the best way to get the maximum out of two internet connections
in
EL 8 for my desktop?
Thanks
Define maximum.
Are you looking for redundancy / fail-over in the event one connection fails or are you looking to combine throughput for maximum bandwidth?
CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Date: Monday, February 15, 2021 11:57:17 +0000 From: Phil Perry pperry@elrepo.org
On 15/02/2021 11:30, Thomas Stephen Lee wrote:
Hi,
I have two internet connections from two ISPs. I also have a desktop with two Ethernet ports.
My question: What is the best way to get the maximum out of two internet connections in EL 8 for my desktop?
Define maximum.
Are you looking for redundancy / fail-over in the event one connection fails or are you looking to combine throughput for maximum bandwidth?
Unless that desktop is the only device you have that you want to be able to get the advantages of having connectivity from two ISPs, I'd get a dual-wan router and go from there. There are a range of options that support 2 or more wan connections and provide load-balancing, fall-over, etc. You'll want to read the specs to find one that best meets your needs.