05-02-2013 08:23 PM - edited 03-04-2019 07:48 PM
Hi friends,
When ever we have commissioned a new physical WAN link we will be assured that for example, a bandwidth of 100Mbps from an ISP. How do we test the link wether it is capable of passing a traffic of 100Mbps other than putting a load on the link via ping command. Please let us know the way how can we put the load to test the links full capability.
Thanks in advance,
Naveen
05-02-2013 08:40 PM
Doing a single ping over the link is not a good test. For one thing processing ping and generating a response is more a test of the processor which generates the response than it is a test of the circuit.
Another issue to consider is that a single stream of traffic is not a good test of the circuit. It is a much better test if you can arrange for multiple streams of traffic.
It would be a better test of the circuit capacity if you could use a tool such as smart bits to generate the traffic rather than depending on a host connected to the router or depending on the router itself to generate test traffic.
HTH
Rick
Sent from Cisco Technical Support iPad App
05-05-2013 05:59 AM
do you have a link for this programs?
05-03-2013 03:59 AM
If hardware based packet generators are out of the question you can use iperf which gives a good indication of what bandwidth you are getting. One end runs a server connection and the other end acts as a client and they stream traffic between themselves and tell you what bandwidth you are getting. There are lots of options such as modifying TCP window size etc. The server / client can be run on Windows or Linux.
05-03-2013 06:38 AM
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For quick verification of provisioned bandwidth, I've used a software based traffic generator that can generate traffic faster than the nominal capacity of the the link. For example, if I send 120 Mbps across a nominal 100 Mbps, I expect 100 Mbps to be received on the other side.
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