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    Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all

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    edgerouter edgerouter 4 colocation it support vpn zerotier
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    • scottalanmillerS
      scottalanmiller @FATeknollogee
      last edited by

      @FATeknollogee said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

      @Pete-S said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

      But it's the fact that small routers have very weak CPUs but they can off load straight IPsec, when you are not doing packet inspection or anything that requires the CPU. However they can't off load OpenVPN.

      Sounds like the choice should def be IPSec for less of a performance hit?

      Pretty much always. That's why IPSec is the de facto protocol for normal VPN usage, to the point that people confuse other things like ZT or OpenVPN as "alternatives" rather than all of them being peers. Every major VPN platform uses IPsec because it is built in to nearly everything and is extremely light to implement.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • 1
        1337
        last edited by

        Here are some benchmarks on IPsec with some different edgerouters.
        https://www.simonmott.co.uk/2018/08/ubiquiti-edgerouter-ipsec-performance/
        From the link it says the more powerful ER-4 will top out at about 450 Mbps of IPsec using AES-128.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • FATeknollogeeF
          FATeknollogee
          last edited by

          Hmmm...is this an option...? https://www.tnsr.com/

          scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • scottalanmillerS
            scottalanmiller @FATeknollogee
            last edited by

            @FATeknollogee said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

            Hmmm...is this an option...? https://www.tnsr.com/

            An option in general? Sure, it's just a vRouter that does IPsec. I'm sure it is good, but you can't run it on an EdgeRouter because it's an OS.

            FATeknollogeeF 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • FATeknollogeeF
              FATeknollogee @scottalanmiller
              last edited by

              @scottalanmiller said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

              @FATeknollogee said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

              Hmmm...is this an option...? https://www.tnsr.com/

              An option in general? Sure, it's just a vRouter that does IPsec. I'm sure it is good, but you can't run it on an EdgeRouter because it's an OS.

              One would have to switch to pfSense if TNSR is a viable option.

              scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • scottalanmillerS
                scottalanmiller @FATeknollogee
                last edited by

                @FATeknollogee said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                @scottalanmiller said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                @FATeknollogee said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                Hmmm...is this an option...? https://www.tnsr.com/

                An option in general? Sure, it's just a vRouter that does IPsec. I'm sure it is good, but you can't run it on an EdgeRouter because it's an OS.

                One would have to switch to pfSense if TNSR is a viable option.

                I guess the real question I'd have is... why? What about TNSR makes it interesting in any way? Aren't you just looking at replacing tried and true, built in IPSec implementations with this complicated package that is just repacking OpenSwan?

                I'm confused what you are trying to achieve. Connecting 5+ sites is the absolute clear use case for normal everyday IPSec on your outside hardware router. This is as "by the textbook" as it gets.

                Can you use other VPN tech for this like OpenVPN, yes. Should you? Not really, it has no benefits to you. IPSec is best for this for speed, support, ease of use.

                This is not a case where ZT has applicability unless you have needs that haven't been mentioned. Same with TNSR, what would this do other than make simple IPSec really hard and complicated for no reason?

                This feels like one of those Aaron threads where he's captivated by all kinds of shiny product pages and misses that he's trying to do something very straightforward that is handled best by the tools that everyone uses for this every day. I'm missing what is driving the attempt to research new, hip, flashy products as none of them seem to bring anything to this particular table.

                FATeknollogeeF 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @FATeknollogee
                  last edited by

                  @FATeknollogee said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                  What options are available today?
                  VPN, ZeroTier??

                  Keep in mind anything that does this is a VPN. ZT and others are not VPN alternatives, they are just VPNs. VPN (or leased lines) are the only possible options at the end of the day.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • FATeknollogeeF
                    FATeknollogee @scottalanmiller
                    last edited by FATeknollogee

                    @scottalanmiller said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                    @FATeknollogee said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                    @scottalanmiller said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                    @FATeknollogee said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                    Hmmm...is this an option...? https://www.tnsr.com/

                    An option in general? Sure, it's just a vRouter that does IPsec. I'm sure it is good, but you can't run it on an EdgeRouter because it's an OS.

                    One would have to switch to pfSense if TNSR is a viable option.

                    I guess the real question I'd have is... why? What about TNSR makes it interesting in any way? Aren't you just looking at replacing tried and true, built in IPSec implementations with this complicated package that is just repacking OpenSwan?

                    I'm confused what you are trying to achieve. Connecting 5+ sites is the absolute clear use case for normal everyday IPSec on your outside hardware router. This is as "by the textbook" as it gets.

                    Can you use other VPN tech for this like OpenVPN, yes. Should you? Not really, it has no benefits to you. IPSec is best for this for speed, support, ease of use.

                    This is not a case where ZT has applicability unless you have needs that haven't been mentioned. Same with TNSR, what would this do other than make simple IPSec really hard and complicated for no reason?

                    This feels like one of those Aaron threads where he's captivated by all kinds of shiny product pages and misses that he's trying to do something very straightforward that is handled best by the tools that everyone uses for this every day. I'm missing what is driving the attempt to research new, hip, flashy products as none of them seem to bring anything to this particular table.

                    The claimed speeds is what caught my attention.
                    TNSR "claims" they can do High Speed Site-to-Site IPsec VPN
                    "TNSR provides secure high-speed routing solutions at 1, 10, 40, 100 Gbps, and beyond - at a fraction of the price of alternatives."

                    JaredBuschJ 1 scottalanmillerS 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • JaredBuschJ
                      JaredBusch @FATeknollogee
                      last edited by JaredBusch

                      @FATeknollogee said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                      @scottalanmiller said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                      @FATeknollogee said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                      @scottalanmiller said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                      @FATeknollogee said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                      Hmmm...is this an option...? https://www.tnsr.com/

                      An option in general? Sure, it's just a vRouter that does IPsec. I'm sure it is good, but you can't run it on an EdgeRouter because it's an OS.

                      One would have to switch to pfSense if TNSR is a viable option.

                      I guess the real question I'd have is... why? What about TNSR makes it interesting in any way? Aren't you just looking at replacing tried and true, built in IPSec implementations with this complicated package that is just repacking OpenSwan?

                      I'm confused what you are trying to achieve. Connecting 5+ sites is the absolute clear use case for normal everyday IPSec on your outside hardware router. This is as "by the textbook" as it gets.

                      Can you use other VPN tech for this like OpenVPN, yes. Should you? Not really, it has no benefits to you. IPSec is best for this for speed, support, ease of use.

                      This is not a case where ZT has applicability unless you have needs that haven't been mentioned. Same with TNSR, what would this do other than make simple IPSec really hard and complicated for no reason?

                      This feels like one of those Aaron threads where he's captivated by all kinds of shiny product pages and misses that he's trying to do something very straightforward that is handled best by the tools that everyone uses for this every day. I'm missing what is driving the attempt to research new, hip, flashy products as none of them seem to bring anything to this particular table.

                      The claimed speeds is what caught my attention.
                      TNSR "claims" they can do High Speed Site-to-Site IPsec VPN
                      "TNSR provides secure high-speed routing solutions at 1, 10, 40, 100 Gbps, and beyond - at a fraction of the price of alternatives."

                      Any vRouter should be able to do this though. All you need for any IPSEC solution is enough offloaded processing power to handle the chosen encryption level.

                      scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 5
                      • 1
                        1337 @FATeknollogee
                        last edited by 1337

                        @FATeknollogee said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                        @scottalanmiller said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                        @FATeknollogee said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                        @scottalanmiller said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                        @FATeknollogee said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                        Hmmm...is this an option...? https://www.tnsr.com/

                        An option in general? Sure, it's just a vRouter that does IPsec. I'm sure it is good, but you can't run it on an EdgeRouter because it's an OS.

                        One would have to switch to pfSense if TNSR is a viable option.

                        I guess the real question I'd have is... why? What about TNSR makes it interesting in any way? Aren't you just looking at replacing tried and true, built in IPSec implementations with this complicated package that is just repacking OpenSwan?

                        I'm confused what you are trying to achieve. Connecting 5+ sites is the absolute clear use case for normal everyday IPSec on your outside hardware router. This is as "by the textbook" as it gets.

                        Can you use other VPN tech for this like OpenVPN, yes. Should you? Not really, it has no benefits to you. IPSec is best for this for speed, support, ease of use.

                        This is not a case where ZT has applicability unless you have needs that haven't been mentioned. Same with TNSR, what would this do other than make simple IPSec really hard and complicated for no reason?

                        This feels like one of those Aaron threads where he's captivated by all kinds of shiny product pages and misses that he's trying to do something very straightforward that is handled best by the tools that everyone uses for this every day. I'm missing what is driving the attempt to research new, hip, flashy products as none of them seem to bring anything to this particular table.

                        The claimed speeds is what caught my attention.
                        TNSR "claims" they can do High Speed Site-to-Site IPsec VPN
                        "TNSR provides secure high-speed routing solutions at 1, 10, 40, 100 Gbps, and beyond - at a fraction of the price of alternatives."

                        I've had my eye on TNSR since it was new. It's more of a pure router than pfSense and built primarily for performance. They use DPDK, same as StarWind for instance, to get the high I/O performance. As such it's not suitable for low powered devices.

                        We run pfSense in our colo on standard xeons but our I/O requirements aren't high enough with only 2 gigabit WAN connection to need TNSR. I haven't tested what the limit is but a saturated 100 Mbps OpenVPN link for instance will barely register any CPU movement at all.

                        Intel has done some test a long time ago (2010) to show what AES-NI can do and what kind of performance you get on regular hardware using standard linux kernel.
                        As you can see the test below is running 6 VPN tunnels at the same time and the 10Gbps interface becomes saturated.
                        intel_ipsec_performance.png
                        They use single CPU servers with Xeon E5645 - that CPU is many generations old today. IPsec tunnels are running AES-128-GCM.
                        https://www.intel.com/content/dam/www/public/us/en/documents/white-papers/aes-ipsec-performance-linux-paper.pdf

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • scottalanmillerS
                          scottalanmiller @FATeknollogee
                          last edited by

                          @FATeknollogee said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                          The claimed speeds is what caught my attention.
                          TNSR "claims" they can do High Speed Site-to-Site IPsec VPN
                          "TNSR provides secure high-speed routing solutions at 1, 10, 40, 100 Gbps, and beyond - at a fraction of the price of alternatives

                          All they are doing is IPSec on the CPU. Anyone doing IPSec there gets the same. TNSR isn't doing anything here at all, it's not even doing special IPSec, it's the same generic one that any Linux desktop will use. Which is good, but generic.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • scottalanmillerS
                            scottalanmiller @JaredBusch
                            last edited by

                            @JaredBusch said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                            @FATeknollogee said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                            @scottalanmiller said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                            @FATeknollogee said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                            @scottalanmiller said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                            @FATeknollogee said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                            Hmmm...is this an option...? https://www.tnsr.com/

                            An option in general? Sure, it's just a vRouter that does IPsec. I'm sure it is good, but you can't run it on an EdgeRouter because it's an OS.

                            One would have to switch to pfSense if TNSR is a viable option.

                            I guess the real question I'd have is... why? What about TNSR makes it interesting in any way? Aren't you just looking at replacing tried and true, built in IPSec implementations with this complicated package that is just repacking OpenSwan?

                            I'm confused what you are trying to achieve. Connecting 5+ sites is the absolute clear use case for normal everyday IPSec on your outside hardware router. This is as "by the textbook" as it gets.

                            Can you use other VPN tech for this like OpenVPN, yes. Should you? Not really, it has no benefits to you. IPSec is best for this for speed, support, ease of use.

                            This is not a case where ZT has applicability unless you have needs that haven't been mentioned. Same with TNSR, what would this do other than make simple IPSec really hard and complicated for no reason?

                            This feels like one of those Aaron threads where he's captivated by all kinds of shiny product pages and misses that he's trying to do something very straightforward that is handled best by the tools that everyone uses for this every day. I'm missing what is driving the attempt to research new, hip, flashy products as none of them seem to bring anything to this particular table.

                            The claimed speeds is what caught my attention.
                            TNSR "claims" they can do High Speed Site-to-Site IPsec VPN
                            "TNSR provides secure high-speed routing solutions at 1, 10, 40, 100 Gbps, and beyond - at a fraction of the price of alternatives."

                            Any vRouter should be able to do this though. All you need for any IPSEC solution is enough offloaded processing power to handle the chosen encryption level.

                            Yeah, this is 100% about selecting the CPU, nothing else.

                            1 FATeknollogeeF 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • 1
                              1337 @scottalanmiller
                              last edited by 1337

                              @scottalanmiller said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                              Any vRouter should be able to do this though. All you need for any IPSEC solution is enough offloaded processing power to handle the chosen encryption level.

                              Yeah, this is 100% about selecting the CPU, nothing else.

                              That's not entirely true. The problem with high speed I/O is that the kernel eventually becomes a bottleneck. So to get the performance that the CPU is truly capable of you have to basically bypass the kernel.

                              That's why routers that are using DPDK can get much higher performance.linux-kernel-w-DPDK.png

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • 1
                                1337
                                last edited by

                                Just to show how much DPDK can improve things when you have lots of packets and fast interfaces. This is a performance tests using 4x10GbE.
                                dpdk_total-test-throughput.png

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • FATeknollogeeF
                                  FATeknollogee @scottalanmiller
                                  last edited by

                                  @scottalanmiller said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                                  Yeah, this is 100% about selecting the CPU, nothing else.

                                  If that's the case, there should be some "better/more" choices than the ER4?

                                  scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • scottalanmillerS
                                    scottalanmiller @FATeknollogee
                                    last edited by

                                    @FATeknollogee said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                                    @scottalanmiller said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                                    Yeah, this is 100% about selecting the CPU, nothing else.

                                    If that's the case, there should be some "better/more" choices than the ER4?

                                    Your basic choices are....

                                    ER4 is you want cheap, small hardware.
                                    Bigger Ubiquiti if you want the same but even faster.
                                    Whitebox with larger than Ubiquiti scale hardware.

                                    There are loads of vendors out there, but you are pretty much replicating these three underlying choices in some way. Small hardware, big hardware, white box. In all cases, IPSec is the choice for the fastest option on the given platform.

                                    FATeknollogeeF 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • FATeknollogeeF
                                      FATeknollogee @scottalanmiller
                                      last edited by

                                      @scottalanmiller said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                                      Your basic choices are....

                                      ER4 is you want cheap, small hardware.
                                      Bigger Ubiquiti if you want the same but even faster.
                                      Whitebox with larger than Ubiquiti scale hardware.

                                      Cheap: ER4/ER6
                                      Bigger Ubiquiti: ER Infinity
                                      Whitebox: pfSense (insert fav brand) w own hardware - bigger/faster cpu, more RAM, SSD, Intel NICs etc

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • 1
                                        1337
                                        last edited by

                                        Shouldn't the first question be - how big are your pipes?

                                        Then - how much of that will run over IPsec?

                                        And - what features do you need?

                                        FATeknollogeeF 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                        • FATeknollogeeF
                                          FATeknollogee @1337
                                          last edited by FATeknollogee

                                          @Pete-S said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                                          Shouldn't the first question be - how big are your pipes?

                                          Then - how much of that will run over IPsec?

                                          And - what features do you need?

                                          That's a reasonable question(s)

                                          1. Pipe size: 1x 400/400 (AT&T), 3x 500/500 (Frontier) & 1x 1000/40 (Spectrum). Colo pipe will be adjusted as needed.
                                          2. How much over IPsec: as much as I can get!
                                          3. Features: mainly Site to Site VPN
                                          1 scottalanmillerS JaredBuschJ 4 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • 1
                                            1337 @FATeknollogee
                                            last edited by 1337

                                            @FATeknollogee said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                                            @Pete-S said in Co-lo + 5 (or more) sites....connect 'em all:

                                            Shouldn't the first question be - how big are your pipes?

                                            Then - how much of that will run over IPsec?

                                            And - what features do you need?

                                            That's a reasonable question(s)

                                            1. Pipe size: 1x 400/400 (AT&T), 3x 500/500 (Frontier) & 1x 1000/40 (Spectrum). Colo pipe will be adjusted as needed.
                                            2. How much over IPsec: as much as I can get!
                                            3. Features: mainly Site to Site VPN

                                            Well, you have peak 1900 Mbps in one direction and 940 in the other. But you never get that all the way so 1000/1000 in the colo will likely be more than you need. If it's all going to be IPsec traffic then ER4/ER6 is too small. Do you need HA as well?

                                            FATeknollogeeF scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
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