Performance Analysis of OpenVPN on a Consumer Grade Router
Abstract
Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) offer an alternative solution using Internet Protocol (IP) tunnels to create secure, encrypted communication between geographically distant networks using a common shared medium such as the Internet. They use tunneling to establish end-to-end connectivity. OpenVPN is a cross-platform, secure, highly configurable VPN solution. Security in OpenVPN is handled by the OpenSSL cryptographic library which provides strong security over a Secure Socket Layer (SSL) using standard algorithms such as Advanced Encryption Standard (AES), Blowfish, or Triple DES (3DES). The Linksys WRT54GL router is a consumer-grade router made by Linksys, a division of Cisco Systems, capable of running under Linux. The Linux-based DD-WRT open-source router firmware can run OpenVPN on the Linksys WRT54GL router. For this case study, the performance of OpenVPN is measured and analyzed using a 2k-p fractional factorial design for 5 minus 1 factors where k=5 and p=1. The results show that the throughput is mainly limited by the encryption cipher used, and that the round-trip time (RTT) is mostly dependent on the transport protocol selected.
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