I dont think its a round robin approach or a load balancing vpn. It works at the packet level to bond two WAN connections into a single fat pipe. Their is some speed loss associated with it, example two 100mbps don't quite equal 200mbps more like 180mbsp but it is a great solution vs mushroom networks or peplink speedfusion bonding which could reach into the thousands for their routers and not to mention the cost of their cloud bonding solutions. Not to Mention that it is a very elegant solution vs trying to set up another server in the cloud and creating a bonded vpn tunnel. Need a wife and kids approved solution if you know what i mean.Yet another VPN provider...
What is "Speedify"? round-robin bonded openvpn-tunnels?
Agreed. I don't think mikrotik should be adding additional code to support fringe implementations at this stage (or if ever). There is so much work to do on core functionality first. If it can be implemented within the current functionality through some clever/complex configuration by all means lets have at it. But if it means adding more lines of code to ROS that just means more bugs, and there are enough of them already.Perhaps if Speedify just creates the configuration script needed..
I’m also looking for a better alternative to Peplink Speedfusion or OpenMPTCPRouter.Reviving this thread. Is there anything similar to PepLink's SpeedFusion for Mikrotik? It can be speedify, a generic SD-WAN solution or whatever. The only reason I keep a Peplink router is to use SpeedFusion over multiple LTE links. Being able to do this on Mikrotik, would be a gigantic win and a good revenue source for Mikrotik since this is inherently a subscription service.
At Oracle Cloud you can run a VPS at ARM for free with decent parameters. New ros7.1 give us new option to do that. I hope this can be possible all to finish your idea.I’m also looking for a better alternative to Peplink Speedfusion or OpenMPTCPRouter.
Especially one where I don’t have to provide my own VPS on the other side, and where the connection can be encrypted with OpenVPN or WireGuard.
I saw that. But then you are playing with a device that doesn't even have the proper ethernet jacks.Hey gotsprings, I think you can run speedify on a rasp pi........
So, I did this as a test using an Intel NUC with a couple of 4G and 5G links, and it "works" in that you have an internet connection. Whatever you hand off to will have an internal IP, and even the NUC on the Speedify side has an internal IP. With the standard package, there is no port forwarding, no IPv6 (from the last time I checked) and the max speed is a 1Gb link shared with other users. You can get a "Dedicated Server", which looks to be a VPS, for around 120 per month extra, which is also limited to 1Gb/s and has a 3TB bandwidth cap but does support static IPs and port forwarding... Ideally, if they offered the software for you to install on your instance and added IPv6 support, with, maybe, the option of routing IPs through the network, that would be handy. Another option would be to have Zerotier on your Mikrotik, then speedily in front. Route your static IP (v4 and/or v6) over Zerotier and happy days. Even better would be Zerotier supporting FULL load balancing...If I could put this INFRONT of my routers... this would be awesome. Plus a whole lot cheaper than BigLeaf.
Ok I am more than intrigued... how are you using 2 WANs at once?what i am using is just zerotier, without Speedify. I have a box on prem running Zerotier with 2 WAN links. i have a box in the cloud running Zerotier acting as a gateway. all traffic goes over the zetotier link to the box in the cloud. i skip Speedify altogether... the box in the cloud could be bumped in speed and be faster than what Speedify offer.
Maybe they could put it in a container.But then it's running openwrt not mikrotik. It's like asking Apple for software support on a Mac that's running Windows.
Oh there are use cases for bonding for sure. I didn't look too closely at the timestamps here. Been at this problem for a long while myself too, mainly on the LTE side of multiwan. I settled on Peplinks for bonding when it's needed, generally with wAPacR/etc with own modems to get LTE outside. But it's expensive and relatively inflexible as a standalone router.Between VoIP, Wifi calling, video conference, and the real driving force... Streaming Services.