![]() Your best bet is to use a site that tests as if you're transferring a file. They have their own unique setup that doesn't necessarily jive well for a VPN client. ![]() ![]() In one of my tickets an engineer made a great observation, speed test sites aren't really a good measure of "throughput" or capacity while on VPN. This was done to help prevent fragmentation of the "transfer stream." When this particular change was made I didn't really notice a significant change in throughput capacity. In one of my tickets with TAC they modified the tunnel I use for VPN to a lower amount to account for the encryption overhead (something I hadn't done.) There were varied settings here going down to 1424 down to as low as 1350 which is where I'm currently at. This setting got me to around 50-65Mbps on a speedtest. The best fix I've since deployed is converting the tunnel type to allow IPSec VPN for clients. I opened a few tickets with TAC and got various answers and "fixes." With GP SSL type VPN tunnel I would get between 10-25Mbps. At home without GP I would get between 90-105Mbps. When I first deployed GP using SSL only type tunnel on my 5220 (With decryption) I noticed a significant disparity in my speedtest results. So as my recent efforts have lead me down this path, this is a very difficult question to answer.
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