Speed Test for Nerds
Most people with Internet access in their houses have visited a speed-test Web site to make sure they're getting somewhere close to the speed they're overpaying for. I'm paying more than $100 a month for my business-class connection from Charter, so on a regular basis, I make sure I'm getting the advertised speed. (I seldom get the advertised speed, but the margin of error is acceptable. I guess.)
One of the frustrations with Internet speed tests is that most of them require Adobe Flash to work. Even those sites that don't require Flash do require a rather robust (and frivolous) GUI that I find annoying at best. If you're anything like me, you'd like a simple command-line tool that gives you your speed. If you're truly like me, that last sentence just sparked notions of automated scripts e-mailing results via timed cron jobs at different times during the day. Welcome to the club; we're all nerds here.
Thankfully, my friend Charlie K. (I won't use his last name, because I didn't ask him if I could) posted a link on Google Plus to the speedtest-cli program. The project is on GitHub at https://github.com/sivel/speedtest-cli, and to get the Python-based program, simply do this:
# wget -O speedtest-cli \
https://raw.github.com/sivel/speedtest-cli/master/speedtest_cli.py
# chmod +x speedtest-cli
Then execute the script ./speedtest-cli
to get your results. There are
advanced options as well, but a simple execution of the script will provide
your speed results. You can see the results of my supposed 80/5 business
connection in the screenshot.