Bandwidth Speed

dsh

Perch
Available Bandwidth Speed???

I am uploading a 400MB file to my account.

From home, on cable, it hangs around 40kb/s (expected)

But now I am at a location with dual T1's and an available 320 to 330kb/s of available bandwidth.

I am working on an ftp upload that is hovering around 110 to 150 at max. I know bandwidth will not always be availble on a shared line, but I am thinking this is abit slow.

What is the actual available speed/connection from the Jodo NOC? Does it burst?


I am concerned because I will be DL'ing a large package at many of my clients. If it runs at 40 to 100 KB/s, that stinks. Would be great to see it dl off Jodo host at 3 to 5mb per sec or 300 to 500KB/s.

Thanks in Advance,
DSH
 
150kb/s is maxing a t1 line, are the t1 lines actually "bound" to one? If not, that is why 150kb/s was the max. I have a 100megabit connection downtown, and can get some insane speeds :)
 
They are bonded with an IMA card in a Cisco Router. Many sites, (where applicable) pull 300 to 330 when downloading.
 
Nope, we have no server-level limit (1gbps network cards) and we have a 1 gbps network routers..

Could be some bottleneck in between.
 
Tracing route to www.devspacehosting.com [204.14.107.124]
over a maximum of 30 hops:

1 19 ms 1 ms 1 ms 192.168.102.1
2 19 ms 11 ms 10 ms 10.61.32.1
3 28 ms 9 ms 13 ms srp8-0.hstntxtid-rtr2.houston.rr.com [24.28.101.
241]
4 14 ms 10 ms 8 ms pos12-0.hstntxtid-rtr4.houston.rr.com [24.93.34.
98]
5 38 ms 21 ms 21 ms son0-0-3.dllatxl3-rtr1.texas.rr.com [24.93.33.57
]
6 39 ms 21 ms 21 ms pop2-dls-P2-3.atdn.net [66.185.132.25]
7 252 ms 205 ms 203 ms bb1-dls-P1-0.atdn.net [66.185.133.96]
8 39 ms 21 ms 31 ms pop1-dls-P0-0.atdn.net [66.185.133.81]
9 41 ms 23 ms 25 ms ATT.atdn.net [66.185.134.38]
10 69 ms 49 ms 50 ms tbr1-p011701.dlstx.ip.att.net [12.122.81.190]
11 59 ms 50 ms 49 ms tbr2-cl12.hs1tx.ip.att.net [12.122.10.130]
12 54 ms 49 ms 48 ms tbr1-p013601.hs1tx.ip.att.net [12.122.9.169]
13 52 ms 50 ms 49 ms tbr1-cl1476.ormfl.ip.att.net [12.122.4.102]
14 50 ms 49 ms 48 ms gar1-p370.miufl.ip.att.net [12.123.200.241]
15 67 ms 63 ms 61 ms 12.118.175.82
16 78 ms 61 ms 63 ms border5.pc2.bbnet2.mia003.pnap.net [69.25.0.77]

17 65 ms 62 ms 62 ms webhosting-9.border5.mia003.pnap.net [216.52.162
.66]
18 77 ms 64 ms 64 ms 204.14.107.124

Trace complete.
 
You are able to download at 43.19 KB/sec. from Win6 @ JodoHost.com


I'm on a 1.5 connection and I am downloading other stuff at the moment so not bad considering that.
 
I have any differant sites with diff connections to check this.

A site in Dallas TX on a full T1 got:

You are able to download at 152.13 KB/sec. from Win6 @ JodoHost.com

Which is:
1.19 Mbps

Can not understand why my 5MB Cable modem can not pull down faster then a full T1.
 
I get this from 4 hops out:

How fast is Jodo Host?


Your current bandwidth reading is:

14.35 Mbps

You are able to download at 1.79 MB/sec. from Win6 @ JodoHost.com
 
Script is not accurate for unlimited bandwidth... and having it run local over 4 hops with a LAN connection would be considered unlimited.

Am I correct in thinking your on a LAN?
 
Looks like when I DL a hugh file of Jodo, it hoovers around 320KB/s which calculate to around 2.6 Mbps

Wonder where the other 2.5 Mbps of my cable modem are...
 
Actually, I am on the guest network provided by Terramark(owner of NAP of the americas) at the DC, not part of the same network. But very close.
 
As a test, when I use FlashGet and open 5 connections to the host, I get 602.72 KB/s which equates to 4.931 MB/s

Using all of my Cable modem Bandwidth.

What does this mean? It could mean that any single connection is limited...

Anyone have any other ideas?

1 session only runs so high, but the bandwidth is there with multiple connections. If there is no throttling, then why can't 1 session pull the full 4.931 MB/s

http://www.levinecentral.com/ool/speed.asp - KB Converter
 
We are not throttling anything, for sure :) If I were to set a throttle, it would be total, not per session.
 
I honestly think you guys are getting pretty good speeds from a shared host. We aren't throttling anything
 
Yash said:
I honestly think you guys are getting pretty good speeds from a shared host. We aren't throttling anything

I think the same, also remember cable is shared with everyone on your node so that can play a factor too.
 
I am not complaining, and I do agree that they are not terrible speeds.

Although, if you take the two dynamics that were just mentioned; Shared Hosting and community cable connectivity, even with those, I conjointly pull 4.6MBps multiple connections. That validates that the bandwidth is there in whole. Why is the bandwidth not there in a single session?

How does one go about figuring this out?

Why is this important? Well for starters, podcasting, file downloads and over all page serves. If users are on high speed lines, then they should be able to surf faster. Serving out at under T1 speeds is abit old school. Keep in mind every speedtest result off this thread was posted late in the evening. One would hahve to believe that is the best time... what happens during the day? If it cut in half.... that would stink.
 
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