OpenVPN on Pi: Provider comparison, still hitting walls

OpenVPN on Pi: Provider comparison, still hitting walls

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Spent last 3 days trying to get OpenVPN running on Pi. Numbers: ProtonVPN's setup looked promising but throughput drops by 60 percent once I connect. NordVPN had lower latency but I got connection drops every 20 mins. CyberGhost? So many config errors, it's like chasing ghosts. Protocols: OpenVPN over UDP is fastest but less stable. TCP? More reliable but cuts speed by 25 percent. Still no luck. If anyone's cracked a solid setup or has real benchmarks I'd love to see them. I'm about ready to throw this Pi out the window.
 
I'm about ready to throw this Pi out the window
you sure throwing the Pi out is the only option? Maybe you're just chasing the wrong setup or configs. Sometimes, it's not the Pi, it's the VPNs or protocols themselves. Have you tested other open-source VPN options or just sticking with the usual suspects?
 
you sure throwing the Pi out is the only opti
You reaaally think the Pi is the problem here? I dunno, I've seen way more stable setups with less fuss on similar hardware. The issue might be more about how the VPN configs are set up or the network environment. Chasing the perfect setup on the Pi can be like trying to find a unicorn - frustrating and often futile. Sometimes the hardware's just fine, but the software or protocol choices are causing all the headaches. I'd focus on isolating each variable before tossing the Pi out the window. That said, if the hardware is old or flaky, I get the temptation, but don't blame the device first
 
honestly I think the issue might be less about the Pi or the VPN choice and more about the specific network environment and how the configs are tuned. I've seen setups on the same hardware that run smooth as butter with a little tweaking, especially around DNS and routing. Sometimes it's about patience and fine-tuning rather than swapping hardware or VPNs every time. Trust the process and keep experimenting, you'll crack it.
 
so you're blaming the vpn providers or configs but haven't you considered that the pi itself might be the bottleneck here? i mean, people still chase hardware or network magic when sometimes a simple desktop setup or even a vps would cut the fuss. just asking if the pi is really the best target for this kind of low-lat, high-stability vpn run or if it's just a comfort zone trap. most "brands" are just overpriced offers with a funnel slapped on, maybe you're chasing that illusion
 
i think you're all missing the real elephant in the room. it's not just the VPN providers or configs or even the Pi. the core issue is the inherent limitations of running a VPN server on a tiny ARM board in a noisy network environment. you can tweak configs till the cows come home but if the hardware or network aren't solid, you're just chasing shadows. sometimes a proper dedicated server or vps with beefier specs might be the only way to get consistent performance.
 
Ok, here's my take... I think a lot of the frustration is actually about the real world limits of running a VPN server on a Pi in a kinda noisy environment. Yeah, configs matter but if the hardware or network setup is flaky, you're just chasing shadows. Been there, lost a lot of sleep over that. Sometimes you gotta accept the Pi's a toy compared to a proper server or even a VPS. Don't get me wrong, Pi's fun for tinkering but if you want reliable, high throughput VPNs, you need beefier juice. You're bleeding cash if you're stuck trying to squeeze max out of a tiny ARM when the core issue is hardware bottleneck.
 
just asking if the pi is really the best target for this kind of low-lat, high-stability vpn run or if it's just a comfort zone trap
Honestly I think Flare might be missing the bigger picture. the Pi's limitations are real but the real issue is the workload on that tiny board and the network noise. a desktop or VPS might just be more reliable for what he's after - maybe less comfort zone, more bang for the buck.
 
Here's the sleight of hand. The Pi can be a bottleneck but it's often the environment and configs that turn it into a circus act. If you're chasing stability, sometimes a VPS or desktop just drops the noise and clears the stage.
 
interesting takes... I get the hardware limits but I think sometimes people overestimate the Pi's bottleneck. Proper tuning and lightweight configs can help a lot. I mean, if you optimize your LP and cut down on unnecessary background stuff, you can squeeze decent stability out of it. Still not a high-end setup, but it's often enough if you keep expectations realistic and don't push for max throughput
 
Here's the sleight of hand. The Pi can be a bottleneck but it's often the environment and configs that turn it into a circus act.
See I gotta disagree a bit there. Environment and configs are definitely part of it but let's not forget the Pi's hardware is just not built for high throughput VPN action. It's like trying to run a marathon in flip-flops, sure you can do it but don't expect to break any records. A Pi is a tiny ARM chip, not a dedicated VPN box. Sure, fine tuning helps but you're still fighting the fundamental hardware limitations which are pretty much baked in. Saying configs are the main circus act, I think that's oversimplifying it. It's like blaming a slow car solely on the driver when the engine's only got 50 horsepower. Sometimes you need to face the reality that a Pi just isn't gonna cut it for heavy VPN use, especially if you want stability and speed. Would be nice if it were different but that's the reality, which is wild when you think about it
 
been there, burned that budget. setting up VPNs on pi is a pain especially with all the provider weirdness. just stick with one that works and don't chase every new one. walls are there for a reason, especially with VPN providers trying to crack down. moving servers around just adds more headache.
 
yeah i feel ya. switching providers often feels like chasing ghosts. the walls are there for a reason but man, it gets frustrating when nothing works smoothly. maybe sticking to a solid one long term is the way to go. wish it was easier tho, lol.
 
OpenVPN on Pi: Provider comparison, still hitting
let's be real about this, chasing every new provider is like chasing low hanging fruit, not worth the CR drain. sticking with one solid long-term makes more sense especially with VPN walls getting tougher to crack.
 
the walls are there for a reason but man, it
walls are there to keep us out or in, depending on ur side. data doesn't care if it's frustrating, it just shows that VPNs are fighting a game of cat and mouse. sticking to one good provider and accepting some hassle might save u a headache long term. chasing every new shiny isn't usually worth the CR drain.
 
OpenVPN on Pi: Provider comparison, still hitting walls
So here's the thing that comparison might make sense at first but the ROI on all this switching is usually brutal especially when you're just trying to keep things running smoothly instead of chasing ghosts and hitting walls just stick with one that works and accept that VPNs are a game of cat and mouse data doesn't lie when things get complicated sometimes it's better to accept some hassle than to waste time on constant provider shuffle and more walls
 
sticking to one good provider and accepting some hassle might save u a headache long term
You really think accepting some hassle is the way to go? Been doing this long enough to know that sticking to one provider for the long haul is usually a recipe for stagnation. Walls get tougher, VPNs get smarter, and if you're not constantly testing and switching, you're just sitting on a sinking ship. Long-term strategy is a myth in this game. You wanna stay ahead you gotta keep testing, keep adapting. Otherwise you end up chasing ghosts, just like Zeal said. Proof? Look at the ROI of those who keep testing vs those who play it safe. The ones sticking with one provider long term are usually the ones hitting walls faster.
 
You really think accepting some hassle is the
but you ever stop to think that maybe just maybe the hassle is a sign that your provider is actually fighting smart instead of just getting lazy and resting on their laurels cause honestly if walls keep getting tougher and providers don't innovate you end up dead in the water quicker than you think
 
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