Yeah, I'd like to know too because it runs nowhere near full speed for me.
Of course, our business is connected through one dedicated T-1 line so the max bandwidth is in the 190K/s range. (1.53mb/s) A T-1 line is significantly slower than 100BTX and the route time is significantly longer, on the order of 40-60MS as opposed to .5MS while in the office. If you think about it, 50ms round trips means that the two ends can exchange 20 packets a second (if communication is proceeding serially. Which, with TCP/IP it probably would for the most part). At some points there will be prolonged transfer in one direction but with TCP/IP you get a lot of overhead. I'm running the VPN through UDP to attempt to minimize the packet overhead but it's still slow.
So I have to wonder, what sort of connection would you have to have at work and at home to be able to communicate at nearly full speed? Do you use encryption (i'd hope so!)? Do you use compression?
It would be nice if someone could provide tips for speeding things up so that nobody has to go to the trouble of hacking extra stuff together (like rsync'ing the program files over to local or doing more drastic things.)
If we can get some tips, tricks, and hints together I'll start a wiki page about VPN and Evo. For that matter, please, anyone who uses VPN with evo, please post your setup for me so that I can compile a list of hardware, software, etc. Thanks!
Quote from tdlugosh on 04/12/07 at 17:06:10:Posted by: Dave Miller Posted on: Today at 2:19pm
I use EVO remotely through a VPN and it in nearly as fast as sitting in the office.
What did you do to make it so fast?
Since I no longer work at the office I use VPN to access DBA. Thankfully, since I no longer work at the office, I don't have to access DBA very much. If I did I would not be a happy camper because it's so sloooooow.
Could you share your VPN setup?
Tom Dlugosh