Speedtest CLI. Run speedtest on pfSense box
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@johnpoz point the finger where it belongs. Point it at the ISP. They aren't giving clients the actual results. They run their own servers and you should trust pFSense over an Speedtest.net which is paid for by ISPs.
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Dude has Zero to do with the ISP... What do you not get that a router with X cpu designed to route packets might not be able to do 500/1000 as a client?
Have already show this multiiple times... Test to same freaking place ran on client shows full speed, test on pfsense does not will..
I'm done - have fun...
should trust pFSense over an Speedtest.net which is paid for by ISPs.
You clearly have no clue to what is even being discussed here to be honest..
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@johnpoz if it can't do 500mbps as a client, then how can it possibly act as a client AND a server for packet filtering, suricata, or plain routing? This doesn't make sense unless something was seriously wrong with the libraries.
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Hi know this topic is old but I did not see any other updates elsewhere.
@aln Thank you so much for the work that you have done with this! While there is allot of blustering from people on here with their personal options I think this is a handy tool.
pfsence has many more features then just "routing" and the more information you have about network speeds from different points can be useful.
Personally I like this tool because I have a pfsence box that can handle the workload without issue. It is useful to me to see what speed my edge device is getting to the outside world. (without the fuss of going though the other hops in my internal network) It also helps me keep track of my crappy ISP.
That being said If you ever wanted to make an update.. I would love to see something that gave a history of over period of time that would allow you to see to trends etc.
Just an idea, not sure if anyone else would like this etc. But once again thank you!
EDIT : kind of like what @provels has done but without using a 3rd party etc.
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@Exilewolf
It was a fun exercise, but the results are so variable that I don't think the data is really worth the bits it's printed on. The big dip to the right was easily recognized without the data. It was a local outage. FWIW, this data was gathered from a server behind the FW and not just the FW. I have a 300/20 line.
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@aln thanks so much for this. can you please clarify how can i bind an specific interface when running a test from your widget?
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Haha.. this is a hilariously classic pfsense forums discussion. I love the ones where the supposedly knowledgeable "mod" tells people that they are "holding it wrong" because they cant conceive of people actually using their product how they want.
I too want to do a speedtest from the router. And yes gasp, i use old desktops that get upgraded as routers. And i have ever since my first 486 firewall in 1996, with dubble /netbsd that came on two floppies. What the hell else are you going to do with old desktops? stick em in a 2U server case and rack em up.
The reason i personally want to speed test from the firewall is that the level 1 techs at the ISP always want you to connect your own computer directly to the modem. I dont want to rewire my network and do that, so the next best device to run this sort of test on is the firewall itself. And its a good test to see if the problem is on the lan or wan side too.
I took my sons old computer, a i5-2400 and slapped that in to replace my q6600 core2 quad. And pfsense took it no problem and booted right up after i remapped one interface whoes name changed.
If I wanted an appliance, i would have got a mikrotik. But i prefer running on consumer hardware at home so that if something breaks its easy enough to find some parts in the parts bin to fix it. The only reason i really upgraded was because the core 2 quad mobo only had a 100mb interface and now i have a gig. Which was necessary for this speed upgrade here. I am trying to get 700/20 up that i am paying for now.And i have used plenty of firewalls with large pricetags that pfsense runs circles around in terms of ease of use and setup. Running on consumer hardware isn't a flaw in the product, its one of its main strengths.
I installed the widget with the oneline command (thank you muchly), and find it about the same as speedtest/fast.com. I always prefer speedof.me as that cannot be faked. But it almost always skews quite a bit lower on most connections for some reason. On really nice connections i get what is advertised with the speedof.me test but rarely on home or small biz connections. Maybe last mile lag affects that test more.
Anyways got what i needed and it was a fun ride. The widget works and i am grateful for that. The pfsense community delivers once again!
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@andresmorago you will need to modify the widget and add the --source parameter to the cli command. Look it up in the speedtest-cli docs.
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@ipfftw I'm glad to hear you are using the widget
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Wonder if anyone's seeing this. When I run speedtest cli from my Windows box to pull the list of servers,
C:\Python27\python.exe C:\Python27\Lib\site-packages\speedtest.py --list > serverlist.txt
normally it returns a list including a half dozen that are within 30 miles or so of my location. My scheduled task is hard-coded to the server that returns the best ping (the server that is normally chosen when I run speedtest without choosing a specific server). Recently, though, the closest servers are over 700km away and the nearby servers are missing.
Retrieving speedtest.net configuration... 12733) WestPAnet, Inc. (Warren, PA, United States) [758.42 km] 9276) ColoCrossing (Buffalo, NY, United States) [775.56 km] 31483) CreeperHost LTD (Buffalo, NY, United States) [775.56 km] 32993) Crowsnest Broadband LLC (Altoona, PA, United States) [849.74 km] 14233) Frontier (Rochester, NY, United States) [879.94 km] 14148) Rochester Institute of Technology (Rochester, NY, United States) [879.94 km] 1239) Synoptek (Rochester, NY, United States) [879.94 km] 39474) University of Rochester (Rochester, NY, United States) [879.94 km]
And needless to say, my data is borked. Strange, when Irun the Windows client Ookla speedtest, it finds the servers w/o issue.
Anyone else see this?
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@provels said in Speedtest CLI. Run speedtest on pfSense box:
@lastb0isct said in Speedtest CLI. Run speedtest on pfSense box:
Does anyone have the speedtest.py still? I can't seem to find it.
It comes with the package when you install it. SSH to your box and run:
pkg search speedtest [2.4.4-RELEASE][root@fw.workgroup]/root: pkg search speedtest py37-speedtest-cli-2.1.1 Command line interface for testing internet bandwidth
Then run
pkg install py37-speedtest-cli-2.1.1
Have fun!
Anyone seeing this error? I get this when i run any pkg command in this thread. Am on pfsense 2.4.5 on a 3100. Thanks
Shared object "libarchive.so.7" not found, required by "pkg"
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The binary package from Ookla is so much better than speedtest-cli which is ancient. But: no-source, deal I Guess.
See: https://www.speedtest.net/apps/cli
and:https://bintray.com/ookla/download/download_file?file_path=ookla-speedtest-1.0.0-freebsd.pkgObviously being a binary it's x86_64 only.
I don't suppose anyone's wrapping a page, or better widget, around speedtest? The above one already can output json.
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@daplumber look for my widget on this topic's history
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@aln I was hoping fir a widget based on the Ookla binary above. It really is that much more accurate. Yes, Iām running an 8-core AMD with 8GB desktop as a router. Waste not, want not. Good for Suricata too.
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@alpharulez said in Speedtest CLI. Run speedtest on pfSense box:
@provels said in Speedtest CLI. Run speedtest on pfSense box:
@lastb0isct said in Speedtest CLI. Run speedtest on pfSense box:
Does anyone have the speedtest.py still? I can't seem to find it.
It comes with the package when you install it. SSH to your box and run:
pkg search speedtest
Then run
pkg install py37-speedtest-cli-2.1.1
Have fun!
Anyone seeing this error? I get this when i run any pkg command in this thread. Am on pfsense 2.4.5 on a 3100. Thanks
Shared object "libarchive.so.7" not found, required by "pkg"
For anyone facing this issue with pkg... here is what I did to resolve...
pkg update
this will fail
Instead run:
pkg-static updatethen run:
pkg bootstrap -fthen install:
pkg update
pkg install -y py37-speedtest-clidirectories for reference if you would like to install the widget php file:
/usr/local/bin/speedtestcreate new file with nano, copy paste code from the Github link @aln provided.
/usr/local/www/widgets/widgets/speedtest.widget.phpShould be good to go when you go back into the web portal and add widget (+). dont forget to save...
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@alpharulez I had no issue installing the py37 speedtest. But the Ookla binary is so much better on the command line, I deinstalled the py37 version.
A widget fir the binary would be nice to have, but Iām not fussed about it.
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@daplumber Cool. I had 'pkg' issues on the box. So the above steps fixed it.
So what was the difference between the py37 and ookla builds?
My understanding was Ookla did not have an ARM version of the build so might be an issue with my 3100.
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@alpharulez the py37 build is Open Source, but also ancient, based on the code from when Speedtest was a Flash App! (read the Ookla site). The Ookla binary is closed, only compiled for FreeBSD 11.2, and thus pfSense 2.5.0 (right now). But the binary is based off their current code, is available for MacOS, Linux, and FreeBSD and comes with a plethora of output options, including a nifty text based interactive version. Think htop vs top functionality-wise.
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