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After further investigation, I can see my CPU utilization is 100%. This looks like a bottleneck, and I'm almost certain it's because of Docker for Windows. Networking isn't nearly as good as it is on Linux. I'm not really sure what to do now as there doesn't appear to be a native windows version. |
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I am receiving near the same type of issue. I run Speedtracker from my raspberry pi on a Ubuntu 22 with a direct wired connection into the back of my home gateway. No mater if I am running the test manually from Speed tracker or have the automated cron run it either every 1hr or every 30 mins my speed test come out way lower using Speed Tracker then when I go from a typical mac computer or even running it off my AppleTV. The test are about 200 to 400 or more mbps lower. My average speed test running outside of Speedtracker is 800 to 900 and I have 1 gig service. So why is there so much discrepancy. I use AT&T servers for running the test and just simple Speed Tracker is just showing slower results which I don't understand. Could someone help and explain. What am I doing wrong? or is this normal? The only thing that runs off my mini Ubuntu server is this program . |
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I'm running in Docker on Windows. I noticed I haven't got a single speed test over 370Mbps with speedtest-tracker. It doesn't matter if it's a scheduled test, or one that I manually started, or if I manually run a test via console in the container with
speedtest --accept-license --accept-gdpr
. In the browser, I get consistently between 400-500 (these are the speeds I pay for). I get these same results whether I run speedtest.net test on a separate computer, or on my Windows server running Docker. Could this have something to do with the overhead when using Docker networking? That's the only thing that I can think of. Any help is appreciated.Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
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