Hiya, quickly wondering if there is a big difference between speeds when using a vpn compared to using a proxy server solution? Anyone got any experience here or good articles to refer to?
Thanks 🌻
- A VPN is (in a generic, high level sense) a proxy. It’s just proxying layer2 frames, vs. layer 4 protocols. - So the answer depends entirely on the traffic and the architecture you’ve built to support it. - I see, thank you! 
 
- Generally speaking it’s possible for the performance to be essentially identical. - It’s more important that you pick the correct tool for the job and the how and where it’s being hosted makes sense for your use case. - Keep in mind that there’s many forms of proxies and VPNs. So your question appears more like “what’s faster, a truck or a car?” People would ask you if it’s for highway driving, towing a boat, getting to work in the city, etc - So let’s establish your use case. I’ll give you a few examples that are in favour of various popular technologies. - If you’re looking for something to run internally on your network to cache the internet to conserve bandwidth for all your clients. A squid proxy may be what you need. - If you’re looking to hide from your ISP that you’re using deluge to torrent Monster Musume a 3rd party VPN service (preferably using wireguard and a well reviewed provider) is more suitable for security and performance. - If you’re in a country where you could be executed for posting doodles of Muhammad, you’ll need a much more complicated suite of tools and the knowledge to safely use them. - https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLQVJk9oC5JKp_8F9LPa3Pv67boA80KLm1 - Thanks for the answer and examples, I’ll check out the vids 😊 
 
- From my experience it depends strongly on the up/down speed of the servers in question, VPN is more secure but a tiny bit slower, but thats so little it doesn’t really matter. - Yeah, especially if you use WireGuard on Linux, which is in the kernel and hardware accelerated. It’s efficient enough that routers can run it well. - So unless you’re pushing hardware limits, I’d expect it to be a wash. - Biggest limit for wire guard between two Linux servers is either the server hardware or the cables in between. 
- Yep, just tried this today, and holy hell! - I have older Cisco Linksys WRT160NL running DD-WRT. With OpenVPN I could get 5Mbps capped by CPU struggling at 100%. But today I tried WireGuard, and somehow even while doing 30Mbps, the CPU was just at around 25%. 
 
 
- It all depends on the hardware doing the work and the configuration. - VPN will be quicker for some while a proxy connection will work for others. 





