
TailScale
ZeroTier
ngrok
Netmaker
OpenVPN
WireGuard
NetBird
Nextcloud
LibreSpeed
Fast.com
SpeedOf.Me
Speedtest.net
nPerf
Testmy.net
Speed Test by Cloudflare
speedtest-cli
TailScale
LibreSpeedThey make the already great wireguard even better! Installation and configuration is a breeze, can easily connect to machines behind firewall(s) without altering anything.
Definitely made life easier.
Based on our record, TailScale seems to be a lot more popular than LibreSpeed. While we know about 543 links to TailScale, we've tracked only 33 mentions of LibreSpeed. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Tailscale + exit node for clean IP rotation. - Source: dev.to / 6 days ago
Tailscale is how every machine in the stack is reachable from outside the local network. All four machines are on the same Tailnet, which means I can reach any service from anywhere without opening ports or maintaining a VPN server. - Source: dev.to / 19 days ago
Still the most reliable setup, honestly. SSH into your machine over Tailscale (or Mosh if your connection is rubbish), reattach your tmux session, carry on. Free, works everywhere, been around forever. The downside is it's all terminal and you need to know your way around. Not exactly mobile-friendly either. Typing SSH commands on a phone keyboard is proper painful. - Source: dev.to / 2 months ago
The entire system runs on three machines connected via Tailscale mesh VPN:. - Source: dev.to / 3 months ago
ClickHouse's BYOC also uses an outbound-only channel for management traffic. Control-plane connectivity from the ClickHouse VPC to the customer's BYOC VPC is provided over a Tailscale connection that is outbound-only from the customer's BYOC VPC. ClickHouse engineers must request time-bound, audited access through an internal approval system; they can only reach system tables and infrastructure components, never... - Source: dev.to / 4 months ago
Try hosting a DIY speed test on a cloud server (like Google colab or the free oracle instances or whatever): https://github.com/librespeed/speedtest. - Source: Hacker News / almost 3 years ago
It should be DIA. They provide the internet connection to the company since 2 decades and it's a very small ISP, so it's very vague in terms of contract. Iperf was giving me very terrible results with TCP, UDP was giving me a couple of Gbit/s throughput, definitely a wrong result. We are using this self hosted speedtest. All my results above are based on this software: Https://github.com/librespeed/speedtest. Source: over 3 years ago
Put a copy of Librespeed on a web server that's accessible through the VPN and told them to use that. For (our) convenience, it's logged into a database that's correlated with the VPN login/logout times so the users don't even need to log in to use it, but we still know whose test result it is. Source: over 3 years ago
There is a selfhosted solution for speed testing called LibreSpeed. You could try it and see the results. Source: over 3 years ago
In this particular instance though, adolfintel appears to be the developer of Librespeed. The official documentation in that GitHub repo points to that docker image by adolfintel. Therefore, it counts as the official docker image in my book. Source: over 3 years ago
ZeroTier - Extremely simple P2P Encrypted VPN
Fast.com - Quickly test your internet speed with this fast-loading speed test powered by Netflix.
ngrok - ngrok enables secure introspectable tunnels to localhost webhook development tool and debugging tool.
SpeedOf.Me - SpeedOf.Me is an HTML5 Internet speed test. No Flash or Java needed!
Netmaker - Netmaker automates mesh VPN's and software-defined networks using WireGuard.
Speedtest.net - Test your Internet connection bandwidth to locations around the world with this interactive broadband speed test from Ookla