Implemented --small and --smaller

With the added code, it's now possible to pass --small and -smaller to do lighter/quicker/smaller tests, especially useful in low-bandwidth environments. They are of course less accurate, especially on high speed connections, but on a high speed connection you won't need -small[er] anyway.
This commit is contained in:
Luc 2014-02-08 21:04:58 +01:00
parent 756f04da76
commit 56d2263ef9
1 changed files with 25 additions and 3 deletions

View File

@ -460,6 +460,10 @@ def speedtest():
help='Display a list of speedtest.net servers '
'sorted by distance')
parser.add_argument('--server', help='Specify a server ID to test against')
parser.add_argument('--small', action='store_true',
help='Perform a lighter test')
parser.add_argument('--smaller', action='store_true',
help='Perform a very light test')
parser.add_argument('--mini', help='URL of the Speedtest Mini server')
parser.add_argument('--source', help='Source IP address to bind to')
parser.add_argument('--version', action='store_true',
@ -573,7 +577,13 @@ def speedtest():
else:
print_('Ping: %(latency)s ms' % best)
if args.smaller:
sizes = [350]
elif args.small:
sizes = [350, 500, 1000]
else:
sizes = [350, 500, 750, 1000, 1500, 2000, 2500, 3000, 3500, 4000]
urls = []
for size in sizes:
for i in range(0, 4):
@ -586,10 +596,22 @@ def speedtest():
print_()
print_('Download: %0.2f Mbit/s' % ((dlspeed / 1000 / 1000) * 8))
if args.smaller:
# Relative weight: 3.5 (=7*.5)
rounds = 7
sizesizes = [int(.5 * 1000 * 1000)]
elif args.small:
# Relative weight: 7.5 (=15*.5)
rounds = 15
sizesizes = [int(.5 * 1000 * 1000)]
else:
# Relative weight: 18.75 (=25*.25+25*.5)
rounds = 25
sizesizes = [int(.25 * 1000 * 1000), int(.5 * 1000 * 1000)]
sizes = []
for size in sizesizes:
for i in range(0, 25):
for i in range(0, rounds):
sizes.append(size)
if not args.simple:
print_('Testing upload speed', end='')