FusionHub router Throughputand VPN Throughput

Hi Support,

So, if I activate 1000 peers with 1 Gbps bandwidth each, does that mean the total network Throughput either total VPN Throughput(upload + download) are both 1 Gbps?

Regard,
Bit.

Not sure I understand the question.
A fusionhub with a 1000 peer license will support whatever throughput the underlying hypervisor can deliver within the limitation of the Fusionhub OS’s multi-thread performance.

You shouldn’t do 1000 peers on a single FusionHub though if you want to stay sane. The UI it’s geared up for it and if you have a network outage the CPU load of 1000 peers trying to reconnect and start VPN tunnels at exactly the same time will cripple most Fusinohub vms.

200-400 peers is a sweet spot and by distributing your peers across multiple fusionhubs on multiple hosts you’d benefit from inherently higher levels of resilience.

Hi Sir,

I mean fusionhub 1Gbps bandwidth is router throughput either vpn throughput ?

Regard,
Bit.

But you don’t buy Fusionhub licensing by bandwidth. You buy licensing by peer count.

Any bandwidth limitation comes from the underlying physical hypervisor network interfaces you are running the Fusionhub Virtual machine on.

I don’t think I have ever seen a table of Fusionhub virtual hardware resources against throughput. We should make one.

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Hi Sir,

image
I mean 100 Mbps , 200 Mbps … these bandwidth is router bandwidth either VPN bandwidth ?

Regard,
Bit.

that is the sizing guide if for the AWS VM which you can install fusionhub on. That machine size should be able to support 1000 speedfusion tunnnels and 1gbps of throughput. The license for the fusionhub is to support the number of tunnels, you can put it on a large VM and support much more than 1gbps of thoughput.

Ah good question. I would assume that these recommendations are for VPN throughput since that is the purpose of Fusionhub.

Hi Sir,

Thank you response , the VPN bandwidth after encryption either decryption?

Regard,
Bit.