Super User Asked by PovilasSid on December 18, 2021
I started noticing some lag while watching YouTube and Twitch and after running ping in background identified that there was some connection drops or slowdowns.
I called my ISP and they are sending a technician to check it out. I would like to show him some fluctuation in my connection reliability and massive drops in speed over like 24 hours or so.
ping google.com -t
Is actually almost enough. I was just thinking maybe there is a bit better tool than thousands of lines of logs? Something that puts them in chart?
I also have a server at work that has pretty stable 1Gbs connection. Is there tools that can help test specific two nodes then both of them are controlled?
Another one for Windows is Ping Tracer. It saves logs and has a graph that can be exported. It can ping each hop on the route.
Answered by Vimes on December 18, 2021
i just came across this speed test; i'm kind of surprised other speed test services don't have the same option to repeat the test over time. it will let you set the interval of tests down to every 5 mins. i'm curious to see if it will show the intermittent dropout that i am currently experiencing - it may not due to the time between tests.
Answered by Tom Carchrae on December 18, 2021
I find pathping
to be a very useful utility in these cases, at least if you're on windows. I'm currently on linux, so I unfortunately do not have the ability to verify the syntax, but if my memory serves me right, it's either similar or identical to that of ping
.
Basically, it works like ping, but instead of pinging just your target, it also pings every hop of the way. It does this by first doing a traceroute to figure out each hop, and then it'll start pinging each of those, and keep doing so for 10 minutes to gather statistics. This way it'll be able to see if there's an obvious problem somewhere. Source: An ISP once asked for info from pathping
when troubleshooting my SDSL once upon a time.
It is worth noticing that ICMP-ping is very limited, so it won't put any stress on the bandwidth, and in most cases, problems like these only show up when there's a significant traffic. Try shoving a lot of date to or from an FTP server or something similar, if possible, one that you can also pathping.
As for utilizing your server, this could possibly be the FTP mentioned above (it doesn't have to be FTP... any protocol will do, really). Additionally, using nc
if you're on a unix-oriented system is also a good way of finding additional information for bandwidth behavior.
Answered by Jarmund on December 18, 2021
You could use smokeping: http://oss.oetiker.ch/smokeping/
It will draw graphs, were any fluctuation and drops in your connectivity will be visible.
Answered by buzz boy on December 18, 2021
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