It's never for that purpose. It's to combine to normal connections so as to
increase reliability. The scenario you just described would require a
wormhole with one end in the 1990s.

On Aug 16, 2017 5:25 PM, "Juliusz Chroboczek" <j...@irif.fr> wrote:

> > I think this is a real edge case. You have two connections, the DNS
> server on
> > one of them is broken, the DNS server on the other is not, but the second
> > connection performs so much worse than the first
>
> That's exactly the kind of situation that we'd like Homenet to work well
> in.  Connection A is a 1.5Mbit/s leased line, it's rock solid, and has
> rock solid infrastructure behind it.  Connection B is consumer FTTH at
> 1Gbit/s, it's flaky, and it's backed by infrastructure that works on
> Mondays only.
>
> Quite frankly, if it's not for combining fast with reliable, I just don't
> see what's the purpose of having multiple connections.
>
> -- Juliusz
>
_______________________________________________
homenet mailing list
homenet@ietf.org
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/homenet

Reply via email to