[Bloat] DSLReports Speed Test has latency measurement built-in

Sebastian Moeller moeller0 at gmx.de
Sat Apr 25 02:03:11 EDT 2015


Hi Simon, hi List

On Apr 25, 2015, at 06:26 , Simon Barber <simon at superduper.net> wrote:

> Certainly the VoIP numbers are for peak total latency, and while Justin is measuring total latency because he is only taking a few samples the peak values will be a little higher.

	If your voip number are for peak total latency they need literature citations to back them up, as they are way shorter than what the ITU recommends for one-way-latency (see ITU-T G.114, Fig. 1). I am not "married” to the ITU numbers but I think we should use generally accepted numbers here and not bake our own thresholds (and for all I know your numbers are fine, I just don’t know where they are coming from ;) )

Best Regards
	Sebastian


> 
> Simon
> 
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> 
> On April 24, 2015 9:04:45 PM Dave Taht <dave.taht at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
>> simon all your numbers are too large by at least a factor of 2. I
>> think also you are thinking about total latency, rather than induced
>> latency and jitter.
>> 
>> Please see my earlier email laying out the bands. And gettys' manifesto.
>> 
>> If you are thinking in terms of voip, less than 30ms *jitter* is what
>> you want, and a latency increase of 30ms is a proxy for also holding
>> jitter that low.
>> 
>> 
>> On Fri, Apr 24, 2015 at 8:15 PM, Simon Barber <simon at superduper.net> wrote:
>> > I think it might be useful to have a 'latency guide' for users. It would say
>> > things like
>> >
>> > 100ms - VoIP applications work well
>> > 250ms - VoIP applications - conversation is not as natural as it could be,
>> > although users may not notice this.

	The only way to detect whether a conversation is natural is if users notice, I would say...

>> > 500ms - VoIP applications begin to have awkward pauses in conversation.
>> > 1000ms - VoIP applications have significant annoying pauses in conversation.
>> > 2000ms - VoIP unusable for most interactive conversations.
>> >
>> > 0-50ms - web pages load snappily
>> > 250ms - web pages can often take an extra second to appear, even on the
>> > highest bandwidth links
>> > 1000ms - web pages load significantly slower than they should, taking
>> > several extra seconds to appear, even on the highest bandwidth links
>> > 2000ms+ - web browsing is heavily slowed, with many seconds or even 10s of
>> > seconds of delays for pages to load, even on the highest bandwidth links.
>> >
>> > Gaming.... some kind of guide here....
>> >
>> > Simon
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> > On 4/24/2015 1:55 AM, Sebastian Moeller wrote:
>> >>
>> >> Hi Toke,
>> >>
>> >> On Apr 24, 2015, at 10:29 , Toke Høiland-Jørgensen <toke at toke.dk> wrote:
>> >>
>> >>> Sebastian Moeller <moeller0 at gmx.de> writes:
>> >>>
>> >>>> I know this is not perfect and the numbers will probably require
>> >>>> severe "bike-shedding”
>> >>>
>> >>> Since you're literally asking for it... ;)
>> >>>
>> >>>
>> >>> In this case we're talking about *added* latency. So the ambition should
>> >>> be zero, or so close to it as to be indiscernible. Furthermore, we know
>> >>> that proper application of a good queue management algorithm can keep it
>> >>> pretty close to this. Certainly under 20-30 ms of added latency. So from
>> >>> this, IMO the 'green' or 'excellent' score should be from zero to 30 ms.
>> >>
>> >>         Oh, I can get behind that easily, I just thought basing the limits
>> >> on externally relevant total latency thresholds would directly tell the user
>> >> which applications might run well on his link. Sure this means that people
>> >> on a satellite link most likely will miss out the acceptable voip threshold
>> >> by their base-latency alone, but guess what telephony via satellite leaves
>> >> something to be desired. That said if the alternative is no telephony I
>> >> would take 1 second one-way delay any day ;).
>> >>         What I liked about fixed thresholds is that the test would give a
>> >> good indication what kind of uses are going to work well on the link under
>> >> load, given that during load both base and induced latency come into play. I
>> >> agree that 300ms as first threshold is rather unambiguous though (and I am
>> >> certain that remote X11 will require a massively lower RTT unless one likes
>> >> to think of remote desktop as an oil tanker simulator ;) )
>> >>
>> >>> The other increments I have less opinions about, but 100 ms does seem to
>> >>> be a nice round number, so do yellow from 30-100 ms, then start with the
>> >>> reds somewhere above that, and range up into the deep red / purple /
>> >>> black with skulls and fiery death as we go nearer and above one second?
>> >>>
>> >>>
>> >>> I very much think that raising peoples expectations and being quite
>> >>> ambitious about what to expect is an important part of this. Of course
>> >>> the base latency is going to vary, but the added latency shouldn't. And
>> >>> sine we have the technology to make sure it doesn't, calling out bad
>> >>> results when we see them is reasonable!
>> >>
>> >>         Okay so this would turn into:
>> >>
>> >> base latency to base latency + 30 ms:                           green
>> >> base latency + 31 ms to base latency + 100 ms:          yellow
>> >> base latency + 101 ms to base latency + 200 ms:         orange?
>> >> base latency + 201 ms to base latency + 500 ms:         red
>> >> base latency + 501 ms to base latency + 1000 ms:        fire
>> >> base latency + 1001 ms to infinity:
>> >> fire & brimstone
>> >>
>> >> correct?
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>> -Toke
>> >>
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>> >
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>> 
>> 
>> --
>> Dave Täht
>> Open Networking needs **Open Source Hardware**
>> 
>> https://plus.google.com/u/0/+EricRaymond/posts/JqxCe2pFr67
> 
> 
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