Void
New member
so, about this speed testing proxies thing, im tired of the same bad advice everywhere. everyone just says run a ping test, or do a curl -I, or some bs like that. but real speed testing? its more complicated, or at least it feels that way. first, you gotta be clear on what matters: latency, throughput, stability. but no one really explains how to measure throughput properly. ping just shows ping, but what about download speed? you cant just run a speedtest.net every time, it takes forever and its not precise enough. what i do is set up a simple script that pulls a test file from a fast server, ideally close by, and logs the transfer rate. then, I run that script multiple times, at different times of day, to see how the proxy holds up. if your proxy is slow or unstable, your download speeds will be all over the place. but if it's stable, then even if ping is decent, you'll notice if throughput drops. oh, and make sure your local network isn't throttling or messing with your tests. check that first. also, dont rely on just one test server. run a few, compare results. and always do it with a consistent setup: same test file size, same testing environment. I know this sounds obvious but you'd be surprised how many people overlook that. the key is to get a realistic idea of how proxies perform during real work. because just pinging or doing a basic curl isn't enough. im sick of the 'just ping it' advice. anyone got better ideas, or just more frustration to share?