I have been using an ASUS RT68U for several years having obtained it second hand. It came with Merlin firmware which following consideration I have retained and progressively updated to 380.63_2. I have a 100Mbps cable via VM and primarily use the system for downloading to a Synology NAS that feeds a Windows based KODI which I rarely use in streaming mode.
For the past two years I have been with PureVPN but I have terminated their service as the OpenVPN throughput via the router/NAS path was, in my inexperienced view, far too low at a constant 2.1MBps maximum. In the absence of the VPN the downloads to the NAS would typically be of the order of 20 to 30 MBps.
I struggled to understand why I was getting such a significant throttle but presumed the problem was primarily due to PureVPN or my ISP throttling ports 80 or 443. I had tried altering the ports, using both TPC and UDP, but to no avail. I therefore took on a 30 day trial with Perfect Privacy who appear to be viewed as the creme de la creme but I was stunned when using their apparent fastest servers I struggled to get even 2.0MBps.
WRT resources I can't say either the NAS nor the router appear to be overstressed when downloading via the Openvpn typically with only one core of the router cpu running at 60% and memory on the NAS at 50%. The NVRAM is high at about 4800 but I am not sure if this is significant.
This has caused me to think I am either doing something fundamentally wrong in setting up the router based OpenVPN or the router needs a total overhaul so to speak. Todate I have simply used the service providers ovpn files with little modification other than making a rule that only the NAS is served by the VPN. Is there any merit in editing the ovpn in anyway to effect an improvement in these pathetic download values - if so can any one suggest what modifications should be made.
Its some years since I originally set the router up but I don't recall doing a factory reset so its possible I am simply using some settings inherited from the previous commercial owner although I suspect they are probably already set to default values. Would there be merit in doing a full re-install - can't say the task appeals to me but other than a very extensive and effective ISP throttle I am stumped as to what is causing this problem.
For the past two years I have been with PureVPN but I have terminated their service as the OpenVPN throughput via the router/NAS path was, in my inexperienced view, far too low at a constant 2.1MBps maximum. In the absence of the VPN the downloads to the NAS would typically be of the order of 20 to 30 MBps.
I struggled to understand why I was getting such a significant throttle but presumed the problem was primarily due to PureVPN or my ISP throttling ports 80 or 443. I had tried altering the ports, using both TPC and UDP, but to no avail. I therefore took on a 30 day trial with Perfect Privacy who appear to be viewed as the creme de la creme but I was stunned when using their apparent fastest servers I struggled to get even 2.0MBps.
WRT resources I can't say either the NAS nor the router appear to be overstressed when downloading via the Openvpn typically with only one core of the router cpu running at 60% and memory on the NAS at 50%. The NVRAM is high at about 4800 but I am not sure if this is significant.
This has caused me to think I am either doing something fundamentally wrong in setting up the router based OpenVPN or the router needs a total overhaul so to speak. Todate I have simply used the service providers ovpn files with little modification other than making a rule that only the NAS is served by the VPN. Is there any merit in editing the ovpn in anyway to effect an improvement in these pathetic download values - if so can any one suggest what modifications should be made.
Its some years since I originally set the router up but I don't recall doing a factory reset so its possible I am simply using some settings inherited from the previous commercial owner although I suspect they are probably already set to default values. Would there be merit in doing a full re-install - can't say the task appeals to me but other than a very extensive and effective ISP throttle I am stumped as to what is causing this problem.