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    PfSense hardware for home router - OpenVPN performance

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    • W
      whosmatt
      last edited by

      @sirozha:

      What some people consider here to be VPN is quite different from what's VPN is in a corporate world. Hiding one's identity to be able to download stolen content is not the reson VPN was invented. When one lists VPN throughput to such a service, it's not what VPN's purpose is in pfSense.

      And that doesn't have any bearing on the performance numbers, which is what we're discussing here.  We're talking about the technology and performance on given hardware, not the reasons we're using it.  This discussion is directly relevant to anyone using OpenVPN, regardless of the use case.

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      • M
        mauroman33
        last edited by

        @sirozha:

        What some people consider here to be VPN is quite different from what's VPN is in a corporate world. Hiding one's identity to be able to download stolen content is not the reson VPN was invented. When one lists VPN throughput to such a service, it's not what VPN's purpose is in pfSense.

        Sorry mate, I don't understand. How do you know what is the reason why people are using a VPN here?
        Are you maybe speaking of your personal experience?
        Personally I have some good reasons to use it, starting from the systematic throttling performed by the ISP in my area if you don't use the services directly purchased from it …
        But maybe, as rightly said whosmatt, this is not the forum for this kind of discussion.

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        • S
          sirozha Banned
          last edited by

          Test VPN from the gear you own (and whose specs you know) to your pfSense box across a reliable internet connection. That will give you the performance indication of your hardware. Better yet, test the VPN throughput in the lab to see the maximum throughput your hardware is capable of.

          Stating the VPN throughput of 5 Mbps to some third-party VPN service is hardly an indication that something is wrong with your hardware or software.

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          • P
            Paint
            last edited by

            @Paint:

            here are my advanced server settings:

            fast-io;sndbuf 0;rcvbuf 0;push "sndbuf 524288";push "rcvbuf 524288";keepalive 10 120;push "redirect-gateway def1";push "redirect-gateway-ipv6 def1";push "route-ipv6 2000::/3";

            Here are my advanced client settings:

            fast-io
            fragment 0
            mssfix 0
            sndbuf 524288
            rcvbuf 524288
            lport 0
            remote-random
            remote-cert-tls server
            resolv-retry 4
            key-method 2
            mute 10
            mute-replay-warnings
            keepalive 10 120
            auth-retry nointeract
            setenv FORWARD_COMPATIBLE 1
            verb 3
            reneg-sec 0
            script-security 2
            

            Ultimately, I think we should push to change to Softether as the VPN client.  It supports backwards compatibility to OpenVPN and is much faster than OpenVPN for the same hardware.

            Here is a feature list: https://www.softether.org/1-features

            I started a thread in the package sub-forum regarding my SoftEther FreeBSD package port and performance. My initial tests show I can easily push 150/150 mbps (maximum of my WAN speed) through SoftEther with very low load on my pfSense machine!

            https://forum.pfsense.org/index.php?topic=117626

            I will post some benchmarks and run some theoretical maximum tests to see how fast SoftEther is compared to OpenVPN on my machine (my theoretical OpenVPN max is 299 mbps).

            pfSense i5-4590
            940/880 mbit Fiber Internet from FiOS
            BROCADE ICX6450 48Port L3-Managed Switch w/4x 10GB ports
            Netgear R8000 AP (DD-WRT)

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            • I
              IggyB
              last edited by

              ci323 nano u

              Stats for you guys

              hw.model: Intel(R) Celeron(R) CPU  N3150  @ 1.60GHz
              (cryptodev) BSD cryptodev engine
              (rsax) RSAX engine support
              (rdrand) Intel RDRAND engine
              (dynamic) Dynamic engine loading support

              openssl speed aes-128-cbc aes-192-cbc aes-256-cbc
              OpenSSL 1.0.1s-freebsd  1 Mar 2016
              built on: date not available
              options:bn(64,64) rc4(16x,int) des(idx,cisc,16,int) aes(partial) idea(int) blowfish(idx)
              compiler: clang
              The 'numbers' are in 1000s of bytes per second processed.
              type            16 bytes    64 bytes    256 bytes  1024 bytes  8192 bytes
              aes-128 cbc      27446.63k    31065.88k    32203.01k    79808.59k    80497.95k
              aes-192 cbc      23419.20k    25885.49k    26810.11k    66946.05k    67553.96k
              aes-256 cbc      20250.74k    22164.16k    22912.07k    57832.11k    58552.27k

              openssl speed -engine cryptodev -multi 4 aes-128-cbc aes-192-cbc aes-256-cbc
              OpenSSL 1.0.1s-freebsd  1 Mar 2016
              built on: date not available
              options:bn(64,64) rc4(16x,int) des(idx,cisc,16,int) aes(partial) idea(int) blowfish(idx)
              compiler: clang
              aes-128 cbc    104805.14k  118668.96k  128936.14k  318822.11k  321327.26k
              aes-192 cbc      93729.09k  103600.58k  107154.76k  267119.27k  271302.66k
              aes-256 cbc      80937.83k    88656.43k    91726.42k  226115.54k  230708.57k

              openssl speed -multi 4 bf-cbc
              OpenSSL 1.0.1s-freebsd  1 Mar 2016
              built on: date not available
              options:bn(64,64) rc4(16x,int) des(idx,cisc,16,int) aes(partial) idea(int) blowfish(idx)
              compiler: clang
              blowfish cbc    164957.33k  185746.01k  191440.98k  193272.15k  193628.57k

              openssl speed bf-cbc
              OpenSSL 1.0.1s-freebsd  1 Mar 2016
              built on: date not available
              options:bn(64,64) rc4(16x,int) des(idx,cisc,16,int) aes(partial) idea(int) blowfish(idx)
              compiler: clang
              The 'numbers' are in 1000s of bytes per second processed.
              type            16 bytes    64 bytes    256 bytes  1024 bytes  8192 bytes
              blowfish cbc    41251.69k    46459.56k    47838.06k    48378.47k    48452.95k

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              • S
                spon901
                last edited by

                The measurement above using command:
                time openvpn –test-crypto --secret /tmp/secret --verb 0 --tun-mtu 20000 --cipher aes-256-cbc

                seem to be total innacurate.

                I made following tests.  I connect a i5 laptop and a RK3288 based linux box to a vlan switch.  The RK3288 is used as a vlan router. On Laptop I runned a speed test through this router. and I obtain 300M/150M which is what provider offer.
                Running the above test command I got :
                For RK3288  27 sec which mean 118.5Mbps
                For I5 Laptop 6 sec which mean 533 Mbps.

                So I expect a throughput of around 120Mbps .  However insialling openwrt on both RK3288 box and I5 laptop, performing same test I have only 32Mbps/43Mbps.  Why so big difference comparative with theoeretical speed of 120Mbps

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                • V
                  VAMike
                  last edited by

                  @Pippin:

                  Very much doubt these calculations or any….., to much variables to make a good estimate that will reflect reality.
                  Cipher, digest, hash, compression, mtu, buffersizes, network, latency, etc. all play a role.
                  And also the type of data that goes through the tunnel.

                  Intel Celeron N3150 4x1.6GHz    -TDP 6W  -CPU Mark 1642 -Single Thread  456
                  3200/27,5 = 116 Mbps OpenVPN performance (estimate)

                  As argument, with N3150 (Gigabyte N3150N-D3V), I can tell you that in a client to client Iperf test, I was getting 160 Mbit/s throughput, I used:
                  No crypto hardware selected (meaning AES-NI will be used automatically if it`s supported, N3150 does)
                  no compression
                  DH 2048
                  AES-256-CBC
                  SHA512
                  prng SHA512 32 #(prng_hash = 'RSA-SHA512'/prng_nonce_secret_len = 32)
                  cipher TLSv1/SSLv3 DHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384/2048 bit RSA

                  As you can see, with these somewhat "heavier" settings it is higher then the calculated 116 Mbit/s.

                  Furthermore, keep in mind that this was client to client, meaning there is an extra round of crypto happening at server…..

                  I'd guess that the original benchmark was done with aesni.ko loaded, hence the low crypto performance. Without aesni.ko I benchmark just about exactly 160Mbps on that hardware…

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                  • V
                    VAMike
                    last edited by

                    @spon901:

                    I made following tests.  I connect a i5 laptop and a RK3288 based linux box to a vlan switch.  The RK3288 is used as a vlan router. On Laptop I runned a speed test through this router. and I obtain 300M/150M which is what provider offer.
                    Running the above test command I got :
                    For RK3288  27 sec which mean 118.5Mbps
                    For I5 Laptop 6 sec which mean 533 Mbps.

                    So I expect a throughput of around 120Mbps .  However insialling openwrt on both RK3288 box and I5 laptop, performing same test I have only 32Mbps/43Mbps.  Why so big difference comparative with theoeretical speed of 120Mbps

                    Do I understand correctly that you changed the OS after running the benchmark? Try running the benchmark on the OS you're using for the test.

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                    • S
                      spon901
                      last edited by

                      No,  was the same OS .  I did not change anything.  Just test  directly and the immediately run same test through openvpn. The again run same test directly just to be sure.  The results are :

                      Directly 300/150, through vpn 32/43.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • ?
                        Guest
                        last edited by

                        @spon901:

                        The measurement above using command:
                        time openvpn –test-crypto --secret /tmp/secret --verb 0 --tun-mtu 20000 --cipher aes-256-cbc

                        seem to be total innacurate.

                        I made following tests.  I connect a i5 laptop and a RK3288 based linux box to a vlan switch.  The RK3288 is used as a vlan router. On Laptop I runned a speed test through this router. and I obtain 300M/150M which is what provider offer.
                        Running the above test command I got :
                        For RK3288  27 sec which mean 118.5Mbps
                        For I5 Laptop 6 sec which mean 533 Mbps.

                        So I expect a throughput of around 120Mbps .  However insialling openwrt on both RK3288 box and I5 laptop, performing same test I have only 32Mbps/43Mbps.  Why so big difference comparative with theoeretical speed of 120Mbps

                        OpenWRT is Linux based and not BSD based! This at first. But you will be also getting total
                        other results if you take on both sides Intel Core i5 CPUs and or i7 CPUs. And theoretical
                        you could do a test on the same devices for OpenSSL likes many others are doing, but
                        what you get then out as a result in the real life you should know, is totally another thing!

                        This numbers even can be and will be different pending on the;
                        used hardware (horse power), devices it self and topology of the network or done test.

                        And pease don´t forget that you will need more horse power such OpenWRT is needing,
                        but on the other side you get then not only a small router, you might be able to set up until
                        a fully UTM device if needed.

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                        • D
                          Dalsland
                          last edited by

                          Here is my benchmark for

                          Intel J1900 Quad Core 4x2GHz
                          Network 4*Intel WG82583
                          Eglobal Fanless Mini PC

                          [2.3.2-RELEASE][admin@pfSense.localdomain]/root: time openvpn --test-crypto --secret /tmp/secret --verb 0 --tun-mtu 20000 --cipher aes-256-cbc
                          30.309u 0.023s 0:30.35 99.9%    742+177k 0+0io 0pf+0w
                          
                          

                          30s = 106 Mbps according to the calculation.

                          "Real world"  performance:
                          I have a 100/100 connection

                          No VPN

                          VPN

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                          • M
                            mauroman33
                            last edited by

                            @spon901:

                            No,  was the same OS .  I did not change anything.  Just test  directly and the immediately run same test through openvpn. The again run same test directly just to be sure.  The results are :

                            Directly 300/150, through vpn 32/43.

                            Don't you have doubt that it could be related to your VPN provider?

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                            • S
                              spon901
                              last edited by

                              Both i5 laptop and RK3288 box are in my location connected through a gigabit network.  There is no VPN provider involved, only normal ISP that provide connection with 300Mbit/150Mbit. On laptop I have Windows 7 installed and on RK3288 Ubuntu 14.10.  As I said the RK3288 act like a VLAN router and connected directly , on laptop I can successfully reach maximum speed provider offer (300/150). Now maing the same speed but through openvpn (I simulate laptop using openvpn client tried to conect to RK3288 openvpn server that connect to internet.  In this case the speed was just 32/43.  he issue here is not why the speed is so low.  It maybe because RK3288 cannot do more (however this is also strange becasue is a capable processor having crypto hardware accelerated).  The issue is why testing openvpn speed (and not openssl) gives a so big difference.  And all those tests were repeated several times, just to be sure.  The results were consistent.  Is there any way to be sure that openvpn use hardware accelerated crypto or not.  Because maybe this is the reason of so big difference.

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                              • M
                                mauroman33
                                last edited by

                                Sorry mate, but I didn't understand how pfSense is involved in your test.

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                                • S
                                  spon901
                                  last edited by

                                  It is not yet.  I intend to install it.  ut what I wrote has nothing to do with pfsense, or to any operating system.  It has to do with theoretical speed calculation cs real speed.

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                                  • M
                                    mauroman33
                                    last edited by

                                    You should consider this thread is about the theoretical speed and the real speed obtained through a device running pfSense.

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                                    • S
                                      spon901
                                      last edited by

                                      Ok, so on a non pFsense device there is no correlation between theoretical and real sped ?

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                                      • V
                                        VAMike
                                        last edited by

                                        @spon901:

                                        Ok, so on a non pFsense device there is no correlation between theoretical and real sped ?

                                        The test is a heuristic, and it remains to be seen how accurate it is across a wide variety of machines. In this case I'd specifically wonder whether the abnormally large blocks used to pad the test runtime give wildly inaccurate results for off-board crypto processors. (On the RK3288, IIRC, the crypto is handled by a specific module, as in the old via padlock stuff, and those generally do much better for large blocks than small blocks because of a high fixed setup cost. On systems with onboard crypto like AES-NI for which the heuristic was initially developed, there's a much lower penalty for small blocks.) I doubt that linux vs fbsd has much to do with it.

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                                        • M
                                          mauroman33
                                          last edited by

                                          @spon901:

                                          Ok, so on a non pFsense device there is no correlation between theoretical and real sped ?

                                          I think there is also correlation for not pfSense devices, but I don't think you could be sure to get a definitive answer on the pfSense forum.

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                                          • T
                                            teh g
                                            last edited by

                                            Figured I'd show my J3455 results:

                                            Intel Celeron J3455 4x1.5GHz        -TDP 10W -CPU Mark 2134 -Single Thread  782

                                            AES-256-CBC : 267.9 Mbps
                                            AES-256-GCM: 282.4 Mbps

                                            AES-128-CBC: 270.0 Mbps
                                            AES-128-GCM: 284.9Mbps

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