Re: Modem speed

2001-08-01 Thread John Galt
bing localhost On Wed, 1 Aug 2001, LAMIRAULT Nicolas wrote: >Does anybody know how we can do to know the speed of my internet >connexion ? > > -- Pardon me, but you have obviously mistaken me for someone who gives a damn. email [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Re: Modem speed

2001-08-01 Thread Erik Steffl
you can also try dslreport.com, they have various tools, including the 'speed-meter'. erik Sebastiaan wrote: > > On Wed, 1 Aug 2001, LAMIRAULT Nicolas wrote: > > > Does anybody know how we can do to know the speed of my internet > > connexion ? > > > If you want to know your theoretic

Re: Modem speed

2001-08-01 Thread Sebastiaan
On Wed, 1 Aug 2001, LAMIRAULT Nicolas wrote: > Does anybody know how we can do to know the speed of my internet > connexion ? > If you want to know your theoretical speed, take a look at the modem. If you want a practical speed, go to a download site and download something big (1MB is big enough

Modem speed

2001-08-01 Thread LAMIRAULT Nicolas
Does anybody know how we can do to know the speed of my internet connexion ? -- Nicolas LAMIRAULT

Re: modem speed

1999-10-27 Thread Oki DZ
Attila Csosz wrote: > > I'm looking for a program that measures the speed of downloading( for example > for the wget program ). > ( better if it is console based or can be X-based ) You can use serialmon. It also monitors internal modems (RX,TX,DCD) and display the "led" on the console. Oki

Re: modem speed

1999-10-27 Thread Jean-Yves BARBIER
On Wed, Oct 27, 1999 at 05:13:33PM +0200, Attila Csosz wrote: > I'm looking for a program that measures the speed of downloading( for example > for the wget program ). > ( better if it is console based or can be X-based ) > > Thanks > Attila Hun, hun :))) Use 'iptraf' on another console JY --

modem speed

1999-10-27 Thread Attila Csosz
I'm looking for a program that measures the speed of downloading( for example for the wget program ). ( better if it is console based or can be X-based ) Thanks Attila -- --- - Debian 2.1 Linux / 2.2.9 / qmail - - Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]-

Re: Modem speed

1999-09-30 Thread Marc Mongeon
Christian: The Cisco AS5200 does contain a bank of modems-- if your Windows machine is getting 42000bps, then they're likely 56K modems. Are the Windows and Linux machines calling on the same phone line? They're calling the same phone number, right? To verify that Linux isn't mis-reporting the

Re: Modem speed with wmppp.app

1999-09-30 Thread Salman Ahmed
> "Christian" == Christian Dysthe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: Christian> Hi, I am running Debian Potato with wmppp.app as dialer. I Christian> am using a Diamond SupraExpress external modem (great modem Christian> for Linux btw!) to connect to my two ISP's. Christian> I have w

Re: Modem speed

1999-09-29 Thread Christian Dysthe
On 29 Sep, Marc Mongeon wrote: > Christian: > > I'll guess that ISP 1 has 56K modems on their end, and ISP 2 has 33.6K > modems. Or, the loop between you and ISP 2 is not fit for the digital > communication required for 56K, so the modems fall back to 33.6K > (analog). > > What sort of tests hav

Re: Modem speed

1999-09-29 Thread Marc Mongeon
Christian: I'll guess that ISP 1 has 56K modems on their end, and ISP 2 has 33.6K modems. Or, the loop between you and ISP 2 is not fit for the digital communication required for 56K, so the modems fall back to 33.6K (analog). What sort of tests have you done to verify the speed of the links? I

Modem speed

1999-09-29 Thread Christian Dysthe
Hi, I am running Debian Potato with wmppp.app as dialer. I am using a Diamond SupraExpress external modem (great modem for Linux btw!) to connect to my two ISP's. I have wmppp.app set to report the speed I connect at. On my first ISP I get connects between 42600 and 44000 (accrding to wmppp.app

Re: Clocking Modem Speed

1999-09-22 Thread John Hasler
Ed Cogburn writes: > REPORT CONNECT " didn't work for me (full potato system). My last line > in the chatscript was " CONNECT '' ". To get this working I had to > change that line to " REPORT CONNECT CONNECT '' ". 'REPORT' is a command to chat. 'CONNECT' is an argument to that command. "REPORT

Re: Clocking Modem Speed

1999-09-22 Thread Ed Cogburn
Shao Zhang wrote: > > This is what I get in /var/log/messages: > > And the line speed there would be 45333. Maybe we have some settings > different. > > Sep 22 20:16:59 localhost chat[242]: CONNECT > Sep 22 20:16:59 localhost chat[242]: -- got it > Sep 22 20:16:59 localhost chat[242]: send (^M)

Re: Clocking Modem Speed

1999-09-22 Thread Ed Cogburn
John Hasler wrote: > > Shao writes: > > To get the speed you are connected at, you can add a line in your chat > > script like this: > > REPORT CONNECT > Sorry for weighing into this, but it might be important to note some problems I had doing this. " REPORT CONNECT " did

Re: Clocking Modem Speed

1999-09-21 Thread John Hasler
Shao writes: > To get the speed you are connected at, you can add a line in your chat > script like this: > REPORT CONNECT You also need to tell the modem to report the line speed. ATW1 will do it. > Then you should be able to see the speed you are connected at in > /var/log/messages. Cha

Re: Clocking Modem Speed

1999-09-21 Thread Shao Zhang
To get the speed you are connected at, you can add a line in your chat script like this: REPORT CONNECT Then you should be able to see the speed you are connected at in /var/log/messages. Cheers, Shao. Wim Kerkhoff [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > On 19-Sep-99 bwarsing wrote: > > Hi, > > > >

RE: Clocking Modem Speed

1999-09-20 Thread Wim Kerkhoff
On 19-Sep-99 bwarsing wrote: > Hi, > > what is the way that most people clock their modem connection > speeds? > is there a specific script fo this? > Thanks, > bw You can try 'pppstats -w 1'. This will output a line every second, showing how many bytes were downloading per second. I use wmppp.

Clocking Modem Speed

1999-09-19 Thread bwarsing
Hi, what is the way that most people clock their modem connection speeds? is there a specific script fo this? Thanks, bw

Re: How to determine actual modem speed

1999-04-12 Thread Ookhoi
Hi Dave, > > Thanx! I have an internal Dynalink and an external E-tech, both 56k. Do > > you have any advice for me how to tune them so that they communicate as > > fast as possible? Most likely I have to replace the Dynalink with an > > identical E-tech, but then? What mru and mtu should I try? A

Re: How to determine actual modem speed

1999-04-11 Thread Dave Thayer
On Fri, Apr 09, 1999 at 09:27:40AM +0200, Ookhoi wrote: > > > > Is there a way to measure the actual speed at which a modem is > > > connected? As modems negotiate the speed al the time, the CONNECT string > > > at the start of the connection is not up to date some time later. > > > > Depending o

Re: How to determine actual modem speed

1999-04-09 Thread Ookhoi
> > Is there a way to measure the actual speed at which a modem is > > connected? As modems negotiate the speed al the time, the CONNECT string > > at the start of the connection is not up to date some time later. > > Depending on your modem model, there's probably an AT command which will > give

Re: How to determine actual modem speed

1999-04-09 Thread Dave Thayer
On Thu, Apr 08, 1999 at 08:48:44AM +0200, Ookhoi wrote: > > > Is there a way to measure the actual speed at which a modem is > connected? As modems negotiate the speed al the time, the CONNECT string > at the start of the connection is not up to date some time later. > Depending on your modem m

How to determine actual modem speed

1999-04-08 Thread Ookhoi
Hi, Is there a way to measure the actual speed at which a modem is connected? As modems negotiate the speed al the time, the CONNECT string at the start of the connection is not up to date some time later. Thanx in advance! Groetjes, Ookhoi

Re: Modem Speed

1998-09-22 Thread Bob Nielsen
In addition to line noise, bandwidth and/or phase shifts can sometimes limit the connection, particularly if there are analog-to-digital conversions taking place, which happens when the telco combines multiple lines onto a pair of copper wires. I can only get 24.0Kbps here :-( USR (now 3com) ha

Modem Speed

1998-09-22 Thread Mike Patterson
Hi there. A friend of mine and I both recently got Zoom 56k Modems to allow my friend to hook into my system. Unfortunately, my friend can only connect at 26400 BPS, but we aren't sure why. # setserial -a /dev/ttyS2 /dev/ttyS2, Line 2, UART: 16550A, Port: 0x03e8, IRQ: 4 Baud_base: 115

Re: modem speed

1997-06-16 Thread Lindsay Allen
My method, based on plog:- /usr/local/bin/pinf:- #!/bin/sh grep -B1 -A2 " CARRIER " /var/log/ppp.log tail $* /var/log/ppp.log Lindsay =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Lindsay Allen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Perth, Western Australia voice +61 8 9316 2486

Re: modem speed

1997-06-15 Thread Mike Orr
On Wed, 11 Jun 1997, George Bonser wrote: > On Wed, 11 Jun 1997, Timothy Phan wrote: > > > Hi, > > > > Anyone knows how to determine the modem speed after the PPP has > > connected to the ISP? > > You might set the modem to report the link data rate rat

Re: modem speed

1997-06-11 Thread Douglas Bates
If you use xisp to connect to your ISP, the modem connect speed is displayed in a field of the xisp window. There is a Debian package for xisp in contrib/net. [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Timothy Phan) writes: > Anyone knows how to determine the modem speed after the PPP has > connected to t

Re: modem speed

1997-06-11 Thread Rick Macdonald
On Wed, 11 Jun 1997, Timothy Phan wrote: > Anyone knows how to determine the modem speed after the PPP has > connected to the ISP? I do the following after the connection is made: grep CONNECT /etc/ppp/connect-errors ...RickM... -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-ma

Re: modem speed

1997-06-11 Thread George Bonser
You might set the modem to report the link data rate rather than the serial port rate then tail /var/log/messages and grep for CONNECT after login. On Wed, 11 Jun 1997, Timothy Phan wrote: > Hi, > > Anyone knows how to determine the modem speed after the PPP has > connecte

modem speed

1997-06-11 Thread Timothy Phan
Hi, Anyone knows how to determine the modem speed after the PPP has connected to the ISP? -- Timothy C. Phan ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) NEC America, Inc. ASL 1525 Walnut Hill Ln. Irving