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| // ==UserScript== | |
| // @name Recaptcha Solver (Automatically solves Recaptcha in browser) | |
| // @namespace Recaptcha Solver | |
| // @version 2.1 | |
| // @description Recaptcha Solver in Browser | Automatically solves Recaptcha in browser | |
| // @author engageub | |
| // @match *://*/recaptcha/* | |
| // @connect engageub.pythonanywhere.com | |
| // @connect engageub1.pythonanywhere.com | |
| // @grant GM_xmlhttpRequest |
- I faced bandwidth issues between a WG Peer and a WG server. Download bandwidth when downloading from WG Server to WG peer was reduced significantly and upload bandwidth was practically non existent.
- I found a few reddit posts that said that we need to choose the right MTU. So I wrote a script to find an optimal MTU.
- Ideally I would have liked to have run all possible MTU configurations for both WG Server and WG Peer but for simplicity I choose to fix the WG Server to the original 1420 MTU and tried all MTUs from 1280 to 1500 for the WG Peer.
- On WG server, I started an
iperf3server - On WG peer, I wrote a script that does the following:
wg-quick down wg0
- Edit MTU in the
/etc/wireguard/wg0.conffile
how to leverage oracle's temping offers
The limits of the free tier say that you can create up to 4 instances.
- x2 x86 instances (2core/1g)
- x2 ampere instances (with 4core/24g spread between them)
- 200GB total boot volume space across all intances (minimum of 50G per instance)