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Traffic compression over a DSL line using a linux router
Hi all,
I am quite new to linux, but what I am trying to do is to run a program between my house and a friend's house that needs a bit more bandwidth that my DSL line can provide. I know that I can put in a linux router for the DSL line, but is there any application that can compress the data before it goes over the DSL line to my friend's house? Of course, he would have to have the same box running at his end, which wouldn't be a problem. Thanks for any advise, J. |
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Re: Traffic compression over a DSL line using a linux router
"Jason" <jazfo@bulldoghome.com> writes:
> I am quite new to linux, but what I am trying to do is to run a > program between my house and a friend's house that needs a bit more > bandwidth that my DSL line can provide. I know that I can put in a > linux router for the DSL line, but is there any application that can > compress the data before it goes over the DSL line to my friend's > house? Several. The question, though, is what is *your* application? Perhaps it has a compression feature you could turn on without worrying specifically about the DSL hop. SSH springs to mind; it has compression features that tend not to be turned on by default. In practice many applications can be run through SSH, so this applies also to non-obvious apps like VNC, rdesktop, etc. Similarly, if one of you is serving http to the other, there is a compression feature in Apache that, again, is not usually on (or even present) by default, called "mod_gzip". This makes an enormous difference, in my experience, to the tune of a 4X-8X capacity improvement for web servers on the wrong end of a DSL line. Otherwise, most VPN implementations include, or can include, compression. So you could look at one of the various VPN implementations, such as OpenVPN or IPSec. OpenVPN would be straightforward to implement between two Linux nodes without needing to change out interim hardware like your DSL router. On a more theoretical note, the IPComp extension described in RFC 2393 is exactly what you, and probably very many other, DSL subscribers want. Alas it is not frequently implemented by providers. -- Grant Taylor Embedded Linux Consultant http://www.picante.com/ |
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