Here’s what it looks like for a sustained download: https://i.redd.it/odo31ofu4t971.png This was from a while ago, most of those latency spikes have been dampened. On Tue, Mar 15, 2022 at 3:39 PM Dave Taht wrote: > On Tue, Mar 15, 2022 at 5:09 PM Daniel AJ Sokolov wrote: > > > > Hello, > > > > From this list I have learned that Starlink is optimized to shine in > > tests with speedtest.net and similar sites, but that transmission rates > > drop quickly after about 15 seconds. > > That is not strictly true. The trend is a low rate for the initial > 15s, then a boost, then variable. It happens that speedtest reports > the *last* result in the typically 20s it runs, > so by that light is starlink is "optimized for speedtest". Much of the > internet is "optimized for speedtest", tons of services basically blow > up classic tcp congestion controls at T+21s. > > Attached are two example flent test runs, a rrul test from one project > member's dishy, and a tcp_nup test from anothers. > > For reference also attached is how a present day WISP 60Ghz radio > functions, one which has FQ and AQM, with consistent bandwidth, and > only ~5ms latency swings. Ideally the latency on starlink would not go > over 10ms their baseline ~40ms latency, under these loads. > > Comparing the later two tests you can see the inversions between > bandwidth and latency that come from the fixed length fifos starlink > uses at any of the roughly 3 > speed settings we currently see. > > PS - most web pages cannot use more than 25MBit in the 3s they typically > take. > > > How do they do that, technically? > > Allocate bandwidth? Unknown. Ever 15s seems silly. Not modifying queue > length and/not using a smarter queuing algo like fq_codel or cake when > they do change the bandwidth allocation is the simple flaw in their > design I keep hoping they'll fix. > > > > > Is that a result of Bufferbloat? > > Yes. The rrul test is often illustrative of the problem on how slowly > the internet operates during an upload clogging up the queue, or vice > versa. Most ISPs do some sort of ack filtering or prioritization to > make uploads interfere less with downloads, or use AQM, fq or a > combination of both. > > > Is that a a specific code in the modem > > to cheat, like some car manufacturers cheated on emissions tests? > > I hope not. No, they do have limited capacity, do have to change sats, > do need to allocate bandwidth sanely. AND buffering. > > > Is > > that something done in the satellites who shift capacity from other > > users to those users who initiate downloads? Is that done on the > backhaul? > > Wish we knew. In my ideal world they would supply a statistic that a > sch_cake could take and vary the rate/buffering based on that on the > home router, or just do it more right > in the dishy and head ends with cake + BQL. > > > > > Thank you > > Daniel > > _______________________________________________ > > Starlink mailing list > > Starlink@lists.bufferbloat.net > > https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/starlink > > > > -- > I tried to build a better future, a few times: > https://wayforward.archive.org/?site=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.icei.org > > Dave Täht CEO, TekLibre, LLC > _______________________________________________ > Starlink mailing list > Starlink@lists.bufferbloat.net > https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/starlink >