Hi.
my last message was hard to read because of "sneaky" linebreaks
that found there way into the mail when copying from text editor.
I'm resending this message for better readability in the archive.
Sorry about that.
Berry
---
Hi again.
After fiddeling with pf and trying to statistically de
Hi again.
On 2017-10-31 16:57, Berry Wendermouth wrote:
> I will check again with the VPS provider that the interface of the
> virtual machine is set to the correct value (virtio).
These are the current VM interface settings (anonymized):
vif = [ 'vifname=some-name, model=virtio-net, rate=100Mb/s,
On 2017-10-31 16:00, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
> You went from emulated Realtek ethernet to xnf. Can you try other
> network interfaces?
How would I do this, isn't the interface auto detected by the kernel?
So in the 6.1/i386 setup, the default interface was Realtek. We had
speed problems with this
> Per your request on #openbsd, I do a short reply, to let you reply to it
> again...
Thank you very much Kirill.
> Have you tried to "download" from one of the clients, but without using
> the VPN? You could use tcpbench or iperf in server mode on one of your
> clients and do a port redirect fr
You went from emulated Realtek ethernet to xnf. Can you try other network
interfaces?
Berry Wendermouth [bayb...@riseup.net] wrote:
> Xen based VPS / OpenBSD 6.2 / OpenVPN 2.4.4 => Slow download speed after
>
Hi
Per your request on #openbsd, I do a short reply, to let you reply to it
again...
* Berry Wendermouth [2017-10-30 10:48]:
> Xen based VPS / OpenBSD 6.2 / OpenVPN 2.4.4 => Slow download speed after
>
Xen based VPS / OpenBSD 6.2 / OpenVPN 2.4.4 => Slow download speed after
upgrade
Dear OpenBSD Community,
we are operating an OpenVPN server on OpenBSD. A few days ago we
upgraded to OpenBSD 6.2
and we are
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