On 28 March 2014 17:46, Russell Coker <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Fri, 28 Mar 2014 14:51:21 Toby Corkindale wrote:
>
>> Does anyone have real-world experience of using linux's interface
>> bonding on public networks?
>> (In the bandwidth-aggregation mode, not the redundancy mode)
>
> http://simonmott.co.uk/vpn-bonding
>
> The above blog post describes how to do this, it's apparently worked for
> someone but I wouldn't expect it to work easily or want to rely on it.

That's roughly what I was theorising.. Good to see someone else has
tried it and had it work -- although yeah, it looks and sounds rather
convoluted.

I found that a company called Fusion sells boxes that sound like they
do essentially that -- you plug arbitrary ADSL/4G/whatever WAN
connections into it, and it aggregates them all off to a box somewhere
in their data centre. Costs $145/month to bond two lines, or arbitrary
numbers of lines for $95/month. The router was quite expensive too.


> http://etbe.coker.com.au/2007/08/14/ethernet-bonding-and-a-xen-bridge/
>
> I'd rather spend my time trying to get the Liberal party voted out than go
> to such extremes in search of better performance.

sigh. yeah, but it'll be 2020 by the time we get rid of them, and in
the meantime I'd really, really like to have vaguely-usable internet
access.

Although since Optus or Telstra apparently accidentally unplugged my
port on the DSLAM last week and I was without any internet access at
all for a while, I suddenly realised that 3-4 mbit is a lot better
than none at all!
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