quicly
openmptcprouter
Our great sponsors
quicly | openmptcprouter | |
---|---|---|
1 | 130 | |
594 | 1,655 | |
2.4% | - | |
8.8 | 9.3 | |
4 days ago | 3 days ago | |
C | C | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
quicly
-
QUIC is now RFC 9000
Is it possible to compile quicly cli (referenced in the blog post) with musl instead of glibc. I had to add signal.h and it then compiled successfully but I got illegal instruction segfault when executing cli.
https://github.com/h2o/quicly
There are a few Rust alternatives for QUIC. Anyone tried them and have comments.
https://github.com/cloudflare/quiche
https://github.com/quinn-rs/quinn
https://github.com/mozilla/neqo
openmptcprouter
-
Multipath TCP for Linux
I've been looking at this project for a while which may be interesting to you: https://github.com/Ysurac/openmptcprouter.
I recently bought a property where I cannot get a full fibre connection, but I can get 150-400 Mbps using 5G. I've been thinking about using dual 5G connections and tunneling my traffic via mptcp to a VPS to aggregate the connections.
- OpenMPTCProuter v0.60: an open source solution to aggregate connections
-
802.11ah Wi-Fi HaLOW: The 1 Kilometer WiFi Standard
https://www.openmptcprouter.com/
I mentored the port of MPTCP to OpenWRT years ago, and OpenMPTCPRouter took some of this work in their port.
-
Ask HN: A network device that doesn't exist?
Something which goes further than this, but works very well for my use case and would probably suit others in the WFH crowd: OpenMPTCProuter [1]
This handles failover between connections and also aggregates them using MultiPath TCP to maximize bandwidth & overall reliability at the expense of increased data usage and the cost of running a machine somewhere with a decent connection, even a cheap VPS.
I'm using it to aggregate ADSL, Starlink and 4G, resulting in a stable 250mbps/50mbps connection.
* [1] https://www.openmptcprouter.com/
-
Starlink as an emergency solution
You might want to take a look at https://www.openmptcprouter.com/.
-
Satellite handover latency
I do the same and for the same reason, but I use https://www.openmptcprouter.com/, which is open source. It's game changing!
-
ISO best failover option for SL and T-Mobile 5G
If you're looking for a bonded type solution similar to Speedify, I've had good success with a raspberry pi, an inexpensive 10 port gig switch, a DigitalOcean droplet and https://www.openmptcprouter.com/.
-
Seamless failover solution using channel bonding and Wireguard, is it possible?
I get a VPS, preferably with Debian or Ubuntu and set it up as described here
-
AMA with startyourownisp.com creators: 50+ years in the (W)ISP industry. Ask us anything!
https://www.openmptcprouter.com/ was the inspiration
-
Suggestions for Load Balancing
Then OP could use OpenMPTCProuter to bond the connection, thus actually getting bandwidth benefits out of the multiple carriers.
What are some alternatives?
neqo - Neqo, an implementation of QUIC in Rust
MLVPN - Multi-link VPN (ADSL/SDSL/xDSL/Network aggregation / bonding)
usrsctp - A portable SCTP userland stack
shadowsocks-rust - A Rust port of shadowsocks
base-drafts - Internet-Drafts that make up the base QUIC specification
glorytun - Multipath UDP tunnel
msquic - Cross-platform, C implementation of the IETF QUIC protocol, exposed to C, C++, C# and Rust.
overthebox - OverTheBox - Aggregate and encrypt your multiple internet connections.
openssl - TLS/SSL and crypto library with QUIC APIs
SmoothWAN - An OpenWrt flavor for internet bonding and seamless failover using Speedify with few extras.
quiche - 🥧 Savoury implementation of the QUIC transport protocol and HTTP/3
sctp - A Go implementation of SCTP