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I'm pretty sure that the selection field is a create field as well so if it's not in the list it will be created.
you're right, sorry for this
Thanks for the feedback and sorry that this feature is not obvious.
I've put "or type in" in the placeholder thinking that it would be enough but turns out I was wrong. I'll think how I can clear this up. Any suggestions?
i think the or type in is clear enough
Why not both?
Yes, for websites, a server close to the audience is perfect, however, I can see other uses for servers being in different locations (they aren't all publicly visible) - connectivity between them could be important. For comparison, Serverbear has Cachefly (basically a speed test to the closest Speedtest location) and other locations around the world.
I've had it fail before (my IP was recently bought and geo takes time to change). It was a server in Texas, but Speedtest thought it was in Florida.
Ooh, perfect.
@Silvenga
I see your point. I'll figure out a way to implement that.
Thanks
Here is mine:
Only problem was that I received the email results with the good IP but... in the SPAM folder. Other than this, good work, love the interface
Yeah, I've fixed the IP detection. Will look into delivery issues to your email host (outlook.com right?).
Thanks for the kind words!
CPU detection failed
https://serverscope.io/trials/3Am#system
https://serverscope.io/trials/vA7
I would recommend getting rid of the speedtest.net test to instead use more data center speed test files.
The speedtest.net tests work horribly on servers. Geolocation is most always wrong, the server you are testing from often has more bandwidth available than the speed test server (which leads to incorrect reports) and it is very inconsistent.
What about geekbench instead of unixbench?
Hmm, is this disk read supposed to be this low or my configuration is bad? :S
https://serverscope.io/trials/eK4#io
@Nomad
Ok for sata hdd.
here's mine from liteserver cheap 1y deals
It was on a Debian install but on a random machine I was logged in already when I noticed your post. Probably a dedi @ online. I'll give it another try on a couple of different installs and report back.
I wouldn't use unixbench. Not only are the results flawed on some virtualisations (e.g. Xen), it also takes a lot of time.
A geekbench implementation would be a lot better.
Thanks for the report! Will add to my list
In that case wouldn't we be testing download to the servers instead of speed of outbound traffic? My assumption is that the vast majority of web servers are being downloaded data from rather than uploaded data to. I've been given a few ideas how to work around failing geo location already. Looking to implement that in the next few weeks.
Thanks!
I was thinking about adding geekbench to the kit (since you can pick and choose which benchmarks to run). Not a big fan of UnixBench myself but a lot of people use it.
Well the speedtest website does both upload and download tests when a user runs it. Most every time a customer comes to me saying they are not getting their advertised network speed it is because they are using the speedtest.net cli tool. It is wrong too much and just leads to clients getting incorrect results.
I always end up telling them that the test is not suitable to test servers. If you want your benchmark to replace serverbear, I would prefer if I could actually recommend it and not tell clients to ignore the network results.
Speedtest sux - use iperf instead.
Also fio options are incorrect - IOPS results are totally wrong.
Iperf needs another server. And I think nobody wants to expose one to the volumes of traffic it needs.
I see what you're saying and a I agree that speedtest is not the best solution.
I've opted out to only test upload (so, how fast the server can serve files).
I might add download tests later and since you're running a hosting company, could you please share how much inbound traffic you get in comparison to outbound (my assumption would be 10-20%)?
Although I see your point, I'm not sure if the tool is to blame here. The issue is most likely that some of your customers don't understand how the whole network thing works. I know some people that constantly get upset that they don't get their full speed at home while downloading from some servers located in the middle of nowhere across the ocean.
I agree that this can be an issue. What would you suggest we do?
I'm planning to look more into iperf in later. My initial concern was that I couldn't quickly find public servers available. For example, this page https://iperf.fr/iperf-servers.php lists only two servers in North America both located in California. I would appreciate if you know where to get more.
Total file size for the test can be too small on the servers that don't have much RAM and that's on my list to fix.
Could elaborate why you believe that fio options are incorrect? How would you change them?
I would like to take a moment and say Thank you for all the feedback this community has already given. I did not anticipate such a warm welcome, you guys are awesome. I'm so glad that I've decided to post here and hope that I can deliver to your expectations.
While I definitely get certain types of things with people downloading across the ocean I am mainly referring to situations like this:
Most speedtest.net servers seem to have 1Gbps max connection to them. Speedtest.net is designed to test residential connections so most of the time this is fine.
My nodes each have a 10Gbps connection, 10x that of the server they are testing against. If you combine that with the bandwidth being used by others testing against the speed test server the results are usually far far off, even when in close proximity.
@Awmusic12635 I agree. What would you suggest as an alternative?
And what about inbound / outbound bandwidth ratio, would you be able to share that info?
there is no search
Any updates? In august serverbear closed, so I can only imagine there's more interest in a new, reliable comparison site than ever before...