I guess my ISP uses some subpar hardware because the connection keeps dropping at peak hours. I want to implement a failover system without having to buy some expensive router which I would not be able to justify with my normal usage.

Wanted to know some other ways how people do it .

      • idl3mind@alien.topB
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        10 months ago

        This.

        There are two fiber to the home providers in central Mississippi: AT&T and Cspire. As far as I know, Cspire is a Mississippi only ISP.

        Before I moved 2 years ago, the Cspire connection was rock-solid. It never went offline.

        After we moved, I could wake up on any random day and Cspire would be down for half a day. I guess I can’t complain too much since their synchronous 1GB fiber service is $85/mo, but when you have a teenager that will worry you to death about the internet being offline… well you get the idea.

        So I added ATT 1GB synchronous fiber for $80/mo. I like the Cspire Ethernet handoff better than using the ATT modem (even with IP passthru). The ATT service has been stable since adding it 18 months ago. My router (EdgeRouter 4) easily does load-balancing, so I’ve kept both services.

        No more downtime, I have a dedicated UPS for the network gear (separate from servers) and I can keep internet up for 8+ hours after a power outage.

  • Dus1988@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Main ISP is fiber, house is part of HOA that has cable internet included, so that is my failover.

    Main is 2gbps symmetrical

    Failover is 300 down, 10 up

  • dragnucs@lemmy.ml
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    10 months ago

    I simply fall back to using 4G from another provider than fiber channel.

  • hiddenasian42@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    DSL main, cheap little LTE modem via USB as a fallback. Both are connected to my OPNsense as a gateway group. Failover happens after 5s of full packet loss (and a bunch of less aggressive failover conditions, latency etc.). That of course changes my public IPv4 address, so yes this drops existing connections. Not a big deal for most stuff, Netflix reconnects quickly enough that this isn’t even noticeable. For the stuff where the connection can’t drop like that, I run a VPN tunnel on each of the two uplinks to a small relay box with a static IP sitting in a datacenter. When DSL fails, the traffic is routed through the other VPN link but comes out of the relay box with the same public IP.

  • TinoOG@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    2.5Gbps main uplink and 1Gbps failover uplink, pfsense, and a 5G wireless modem in case of emergency or nuclear fallout

  • BoopJoop01@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    I run dual 4G WAN anyway because of latency and bandwidth, failover was just a bonus.

    I got like 2mbps on cable, and I’m pretty sure the line is now actually broken/severed (tree fell on it) and they just never bothered fixing it because nobody uses it anyway.

  • krissovo@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    I have a Rutx12 router that has 2 cellular modems, if the WAN link fails it will route via 2 load balanced 4g connections. It works great in my hack rack and means my lab is completely mobile with no breaks in connectivity

  • SirLagz@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    pfSense virtual router connect to a FTTP NTD and a Huawei LTE 4G router

  • blami@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    I have 5G LTE modem with unlimited data plan on UPS. It is not bad ISP here but power outages…

  • will592@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Cox Cable modem (metered) and Verizon LTE load balanced with my firewall appliance.