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VDSL bonding

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  • Lance
    replied
    as eek says. You need both ends. ISPs used to offer muli-link PPP (MLPPP) for a premium price. Not seen it for years though as they'd trather sell you a 100Mb/s fixed circuit for a few £k per month.

    What you can do is use some static routing to use a diffeernt DSL router for different endpoints.

    EG. AWS server 100.100.100.1 is routed via 192.168.0.1, adn AWS server 100.100.100.2 is routed via 192.168.0.2
    This can be achieved with a router in front of 2 broadband routers. Or even static routes on Windows using 'route add'.

    If you want to increase the bandwidth to the same endpoint (IP address and port) then you're stuffed.

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  • Snarf
    replied
    Another option, if I need to work with large files (and don't need them.to be physically local to me) I'd just spin up a VM in whatever cloud solution I'm using and use that.

    So if I (for example) need to pull down a few gb of files, change some bits and shove them back up... There's no reason for that to come all the way down to my machine.

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  • eek
    replied
    Originally posted by b0redom View Post
    Anyone doing this?

    I could do with a bit more speed as I'm almost 100% remote and doing a lot of stuff with AWS. Pulling and pushing large java dump files is getting a bit tedious. Lots of places will sell me a 2nd VDSL line, but then I'm apparently on my own, and I'm yet to find a router that supports it (as opposed to just failover/load balancing).
    You won't find one by itself as I believe it needs to be bond at both your end (data is split / combined) and at the other end of the line (combined / split) before you can successfully use it.

    Bonded DSL: Three and Four ADSL Lines | Increase Broadband Speed has an overview of one providers solution

    Leave a comment:


  • b0redom
    started a topic VDSL bonding

    VDSL bonding

    Anyone doing this?

    I could do with a bit more speed as I'm almost 100% remote and doing a lot of stuff with AWS. Pulling and pushing large java dump files is getting a bit tedious. Lots of places will sell me a 2nd VDSL line, but then I'm apparently on my own, and I'm yet to find a router that supports it (as opposed to just failover/load balancing).

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