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* checking bandwidth in coyote
@ 2004-05-11 18:49 otok_otok1998
  2004-05-11 19:35 ` Ray Olszewski
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: otok_otok1998 @ 2004-05-11 18:49 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-newbie

Hello linux-newbier,

i want to know how to checking bandwidth on my coyote linux, i'm using
adsl connection, coyote on Pentium I as router.. thanx 4all

-- 
Best regards,
 otok_otok1998                          mailto:otok_otok1998@yahoo.com.sg

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

* Re: checking bandwidth in coyote
  2004-05-11 18:49 checking bandwidth in coyote otok_otok1998
@ 2004-05-11 19:35 ` Ray Olszewski
       [not found]   ` <1114970915.20040513001532@yahoo.com.sg>
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: Ray Olszewski @ 2004-05-11 19:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-newbie

At 01:49 AM 5/12/2004 +0700, otok_otok1998 wrote:
>Hello linux-newbier,
>
>i want to know how to checking bandwidth on my coyote linux, i'm using
>adsl connection, coyote on Pentium I as router.. thanx 4all

Please be more descriptive about what exactly you want to check. For *example*:

1. Do you want to test actual throughput between a host on your LAN and 
some particular offsite host?

2. Do you want a way to test whether your ADSL line itself actually 
delivers the promised bandwidth?

3. Do you want to track your cumulative use of bandwidth every day for a month?

In general, the way to measure throughput is to run ifconfig periodically 
and compute the differences in Rx and Tx bytes (or packets, if more 
appropriate to your purpose), or access the /proc/net/dev pseudofile 
directly for the same information. But to test the capacity of a 
connection, you will need to measure throughput during controlled tests. 
Fancy tools to measure throughput are, typically, just front ends to one or 
the other of these approaches.

I haven't looked closely at coyote in years, and I doubt you'll find many 
coyote users here on this list ... so any advice you get will probably 
(certainly if from me) be based on standard Linux/Unix utilities, not 
anything specific to coyote. I believe that coyote has its own support 
list, so you might try that if you do want coyote-specific information.



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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

* Re[2]: checking bandwidth in coyote
       [not found]   ` <1114970915.20040513001532@yahoo.com.sg>
@ 2004-05-13 14:32     ` Ray Olszewski
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 3+ messages in thread
From: Ray Olszewski @ 2004-05-13 14:32 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: otok_otok1998; +Cc: linux-newbie

At 12:15 AM 5/13/2004 +0700, otok_otok1998 wrote:
[...]
>RO> At 01:49 AM 5/12/2004 +0700, otok_otok1998 wrote:
> >>Hello linux-newbier,
> >>
> >>i want to know how to checking bandwidth on my coyote linux, i'm using
> >>adsl connection, coyote on Pentium I as router.. thanx 4all
>
>RO> Please be more descriptive about what exactly you want to check.
[...]
>sorry ray.. im not giving the descriptive, i mean i want to check my
>bandwidth size that my adsl isp told me, it's about 128kbps.. once more
>sorry ray :) n thanx


For someone lacking in specialized equipment to test lines, and access to 
both ends of the connection, there is no *definitive* test I know of to 
determine bandwidth size. In practice, when I need to do this, I initiate a 
large transfer of some sort (usually ftp), and simply observe the transfer 
rate. A few considerations:

1. The transfer needs to be large enough to give you a good feel for 
average bandwidth ... not short enough to be influenced by transient 
effects. The larger the better, but as a general matter, something in the 
60 MB range (a Linux kernel source package, for example) usually serves me 
nicely.

2. The source of the transfer needs to have a higher upload speed than the 
alleged download speed of the connections you are trying to test.

3. The source should be "close enough" to you that delays caused by 
intermediate steps in the route are unlikely to affect measurement. (This 
is usually the toughest requirement to meet, and I cannot give you any real 
advice about how to meet it.)

I haven't had occasion to need to do this in years, so I may be missing 
some other considerations that apply. If so, I hope others will jump in 
with some added suggestions. That's why I'm sending this reply back via the 
list rather then just privately.

You can probably observe the speed in the ftp client you use; most of the 
ones I'm familiar with display cumulative download speed for a transfter. 
If not, with a little care you can check total bytes transferred in a given 
time frame using either ifconfig or ip (whichever one coyote supplies).



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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2004-05-13 14:32 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 3+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
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2004-05-11 18:49 checking bandwidth in coyote otok_otok1998
2004-05-11 19:35 ` Ray Olszewski
     [not found]   ` <1114970915.20040513001532@yahoo.com.sg>
2004-05-13 14:32     ` Re[2]: " Ray Olszewski

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