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    Speedtest CLI. Run speedtest on pfSense box

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved pfSense Packages
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    • Z
      Zaphon
      last edited by

      @nikkon:

      Got this on 2.2
      On a 1000 Mbit/s connection i barely get 350.20 Mbit/s on my setup.
      is there any way to tweak network settings and improve this?

      Well as was suggested, don't run this on the box, run it behind the box.  Also, your speed through the box is going to vary greatly based on the type of NIC's you have and the speed of your CPU.  I had a computer that had a pair of Realtek nic's on the motherboard (single core box, about 6-7 years old, makes a great little router), and with gigabit I was maxing out in the 300-400Mbit range.  I bought a dual port Intel NIC and now I'm pushing in the 995Mbit range (this is tested from behind the box to a server on the other side in a lab).  However if the box is much more recent, has a nice fast CPU, your mileage may vary.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • N
        nikkon
        last edited by

        in any case i tested the speed via iperf from my box to a miktorik switch and i got 1Gbit/s full
        I suspect 2 things:

        • ISP - they came once and tested with another machie…worked well
        • pppoe performance

        pfsense 2.3.4 on Supermicro A1SRi-2758F + 8GB ECC + SSD

        Happy PfSense user :)

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • luckman212L
          luckman212 LAYER 8
          last edited by

          @getrav:

          …I found the speedtest code...

          Wanted to thank you for posting this. Today I used this to do a remote speed test at a site where I did not have physical access to nor any remote access to a machine behind the firewall.  The vendor needed us to confirm that a speed increase had been implemented by the ISP and this was the perfect tool for this. Got the job done and saved us a few hours of travel time for what amounted to a 5 minute test.

          Thank you 8)

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • F
            floz
            last edited by

            Thanks for this, exactly what I was looking for.

            Just my little 2 cents how to get this working on pfSense 2.2 and later.

            
            #/etc/rc.conf_mount_rw
            setenv PKG_TMPDIR /root/
            pkg install python27-2.7.10_1
            ln -s /usr/local/bin/python2 /usr/local/bin/python
            pkg_add -r http://files.pfsense.org/packages/8/All/python26-2.6.6.tbz
            fetch -o /root/speedtest-cli https://raw.github.com/sivel/speedtest-cli/master/speedtest_cli.py
            chmod +x /root/speedtest-cli
            #/etc/rc.conf_mount_ro
            
            
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            • D
              doktornotor Banned
              last edited by

              Or just use 2.2.5; python is already there.

              
              $ file /usr/local/bin/python2.7
              /usr/local/bin/python2.7: ELF 64-bit LSB executable, x86-64, version 1 (FreeBSD), dynamically linked, interpreter /libexec/ld-elf.so.1, for FreeBSD 10.1, stripped
              
              
              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • A
                ariyako
                last edited by

                curl -Lo speedtest-cli https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sivel/speedtest-cli/master/speedtest_cli.py
                chmod +x speedtest-cli

                nano speedtest-cli

                change

                #!/usr/bin/env python
                

                to

                #!/usr/local/bin/python2.7
                

                ;)

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • M
                  mdmogren
                  last edited by

                  Just wanted to post this update here for others who use this tool - it is now a package and can be installed using

                  
                  pkg install py27-speedtest-cli
                  
                  

                  Then just run

                  ./usr/local/bin/speedtest-cli
                  
                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • S
                    Smoothrunnings
                    last edited by

                    Is there no GUI version of this?

                    My ubnt USG Pro has a speed tester app on it's firewall GUI. I don't see how it's anymore complicated to get one for Pfsense.

                    Thanks,

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • jimpJ
                      jimp Rebel Alliance Developer Netgate
                      last edited by

                      @Smoothrunnings:

                      Is there no GUI version of this?

                      My ubnt USG Pro has a speed tester app on it's firewall GUI. I don't see how it's anymore complicated to get one for Pfsense.

                      Thanks,

                      No, because speed testing from the firewall itself is inaccurate and unreliable. We don't want to encourage people to rely on bad data. See my previous response on this thread.

                      Remember: Upvote with the 👍 button for any user/post you find to be helpful, informative, or deserving of recognition!

                      Need help fast? Netgate Global Support!

                      Do not Chat/PM for help!

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • A
                        authenticx
                        last edited by

                        Actually this is a good thing to use if you suspect your switch or cabling may be contributing to a loss of bandwidth.  This would narrow the points of failure to your firewall, the connection between your firewall and gateway and the gateway itself.  If you have a large difference between what this cli test reports and what you see in a speed test from your pc you just gained valuable troubleshooting information.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • luckman212L
                          luckman212 LAYER 8
                          last edited by

                          I agree. It can have the standard YMMV/caveat attached, but I have gotten a ton of useful information from having the speedtest_cli pkg installed on my remote units. In my testing, a C2xxxx CPU is more than capable of pulling 400-500Mbps directly with this tool. Very useful!

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • I
                            icewraithuk
                            last edited by

                            I use this to keep my ISP honest, which is a trick in itself :) For those that are interested here's my hack:

                            Go to www.thingspeak.com and register for a free account, create a channel with three fields (I only care about ping, DL and UL, you may want more), go to the API page and make a note of your write API.

                            Do the stuff to get speedtest on your firewall, run a speedtest and note which server it decides is your local/fastest - I use the one hosted by my ISP, for example. Then run a speedtest –list | grep <your chosen="" server="" name="">to get the ID (eg. speedtest --list | grep Virgin in my case)

                            Run a speedtest --server <the id="" you="" found="">--csv to test

                            Edit the speedtest.py file and add these bits - note, this isn't clean or clever, I've gone with functional!

                            • Under the other import lines at the top:
                            import urllib2
                            
                            myAPI="<your api="" key="" goes="" here,="" in="" the="" quotes="">"
                            baseURL = 'https://api.thingspeak.com/update?api_key=%s' % myAPI
                            print baseURL</your>
                            

                            Then go down to around line 700 and look for the CSV output section, add the lines with -> below

                            def csv(self, delimiter=','):
                                    """Return data in CSV format"""
                            
                                    data = self.dict()
                                    out = StringIO()
                                    writer = csv.writer(out, delimiter=delimiter, lineterminator='')
                                    row = [data['server']['id'], data['server']['sponsor'],
                                           data['server']['name'], data['timestamp'],
                                           data['server']['d'], data['ping'], data['download'],
                                           data['upload']]
                                    writer.writerow([to_utf8(v) for v in row])
                            ->      f = urllib2.urlopen(baseURL + "&field1=%s&field2=%s&field3=%s" % (self.ping, self.download, self.upload))
                            ->      print f.read()
                            ->      f.close ()
                                    return out.getvalue()
                            

                            Now run speedtest.py –server 1234 --csv and wait for it to finish, now check on ThingSpeak and check your three fields now have data.

                            I then put the command in my crontab:

                            */30 * * * * /usr/local/bin/python2.7 speedtest.py --server 1234 --csv >/dev/null 2>&1
                            
                            

                            and now every 30 minutes my firewall does a speed test and updates ThingSpeak, which I can check the lovely graphs and make sure I'm relatively consistently getting decent metrics.</the></your>

                            cukalC provelsP K P 4 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 4
                            • S
                              Sergestux
                              last edited by

                              @mdmogren:

                              Just wanted to post this update here for others who use this tool - it is now a package and can be installed using

                              
                              pkg install py27-speedtest-cli
                              
                              

                              Then just run

                              ./usr/local/bin/speedtest-cli
                              

                              Gracias era lo que buscaba

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • cukalC
                                cukal @icewraithuk
                                last edited by

                                @icewraithuk What a great hack & thanks for letting me discover ThingSpeak!

                                I changed the output from bits/sec to Mbit/sec:

                                f = urllib2.urlopen(baseURL + "&field1=%s&field2=%s&field3=%s" % (self.ping, int(self.download) / 1048576, int(self.upload) / 1048576))
                                
                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                • S
                                  S762
                                  last edited by

                                  Sorry, I know this is an old topic but how to I uninstall this package? I used the following to install but don't see it listed under the package manager and would like to remove it.

                                  pkg install py27-speedtest-cli
                                  
                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                  • R
                                    RaidArray
                                    last edited by

                                    You should be able to do a "pkg remove <package name>" from the cli via ssh

                                    S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • S
                                      S762 @RaidArray
                                      last edited by

                                      @raidarray said in Speedtest CLI. Run speedtest on pfSense box:

                                      You should be able to do a "pkg remove <package name>" from the cli via ssh

                                      Thank you!

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • R
                                        RaidArray
                                        last edited by RaidArray

                                        Hi all

                                        Not sure if this is still actively being requested but as a learning exercise for myself i've created a small widget that runs a speedtest from the dashboard happy to share. I'm not really a CLI guy so went down the GUI/Widget route.

                                        1 of 2 speed test options

                                        Full how to can be found @ https://www.spacejunk-inc.com/pfsense/widget/speedtest/2019/03/10/Speed-Test-Widget.html

                                        please let me know what you think, is it useful? how can i improve it?

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                                        • GertjanG
                                          Gertjan
                                          last edited by

                                          Nice !

                                          But keep in mind :

                                          @jimp said in Speedtest CLI. Run speedtest on pfSense box:

                                          No, because speed testing from the firewall itself is inaccurate and unreliable. We don't want to encourage people to rely on bad data. See my previous response on this thread.

                                          @raidarray said in Speedtest CLI. Run speedtest on pfSense box:

                                          how can i improve it?

                                          By adding the option to select the server being used to test ?
                                          Default, speed-test used the closed server on "the list".

                                          No "help me" PM's please. Use the forum, the community will thank you.
                                          Edit : and where are the logs ??

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • provelsP
                                            provels @icewraithuk
                                            last edited by provels

                                            @icewraithuk said in Speedtest CLI. Run speedtest on pfSense box:

                                            I use this to keep my ISP honest, which is a trick in itself :) For those that are interested here's my hack:

                                            Very cool. Greetings from the Future!

                                            EDIT - What fun! I was able to combine instructions from both @icewraithuk and @raidarray and throw this chart into the Dashboard using the dark theme. It runs the CLI speedtest against the lowest ping server every 10 minutes, posts to Thingspeak and the Dashboard reads back the Public feed.

                                            Screenshot_1.png

                                            Live Chart

                                            Peder

                                            MAIN - pfSense+ 24.11-RELEASE - Adlink MXE-5401, i7, 16 GB RAM, 64 GB SSD. 500 GB HDD for SyslogNG
                                            BACKUP - pfSense+ 23.01-RELEASE - Hyper-V Virtual Machine, Gen 1, 2 v-CPUs, 3 GB RAM, 8GB VHDX (Dynamic)

                                            0daymaster0 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
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