Python CLI and utilities for retrieving network performance statistics.
Retrieve near-term performance data about the service provided to a user by an ISP. The data includes up and download speeds, latency, and jitter. The CLI makes it possible to pipe the data to other processes for possible uploading, analysis etc. and/or to build a GUI for displaying current and past data. The cloudflare module is useful for varying the types of test that are done. I will use both in future projects to expand the functionality.
pip install cloudflarepycli
Windows users must also: pip install wres
Type cfspeedtest
in the environment where you installed the package. Note that
this is a shell command, not a Python command.
--debug log network io
--json write json to stdout instead of formatted results
--bps Show output in bits per second
--version show program's version number and exit
The CloudflareSpeedtest
Class is a Python module that facilitates testing the
speed and latency of your internet connection to Cloudflare's servers. It
utilizes the requests
library to perform various tests and provides insights
into download and upload speeds, latency, and other connection metrics.
- Measures download and upload speeds to Cloudflare's servers.
- Calculates latency and jitter for connection stability assessment.
- Provides information about your IP address, ISP, test location, and more.
- Easy-to-use class interface to conduct various connection tests.
The CloudflareSpeedtest
class provides methods to perform various connection
tests and retrieve relevant information. Here's a brief overview of its main
methods:
run_all()
: Runs a full suite of tests, including latency, jitter, download, and upload tests. Returns a dictionary with test results.get_metadata()
: Retrieves information about your IP address, ISP, test location, and more.run_test(test)
: Runs a test according to the givenTestSpec
, and returns timing results.
Refer to the cloudflare.py
file for detailed documentation on each method and
its parameters.
- Install the required dependencies:
pip install requests
- Download the cloudflareclass.py file and include it in your project.
- Import the cloudflare class in your Python script:
from cfspeedtest import CloudflareSpeedtest
- Create an instance of the speedtest class and run tests:
suite = CloudflareSpeedtest() results = suite.run_all() print(results)
Tests for latency are done by requesting one byte packets from Cloudflare, measuring the elapsed time to get a response, and subtracting the server processing time taken from the header in the returned message. Jitter is computed as the mean of the absolute difference between the arrival of consecutive requests.
The cloudflare module makes Python requests to various endpoints of speed.cloudflare.com. Their API is not documented, as far as I know, and so that is a potential breaking point for this code.
Mirroring the performance of the Cloudflare webpage, the CLI does multiple uploads and downloads with different block sizes and the 90th percentile of all these tests is used for calculating up and download times. Results are similar to those obtained from the webpage. Tests can be varied using the cloudflare module.
Unlike Ookla's speedtest CLI, Cloudflare does not require downloading a licensed exe. Cloudflare uses test sites from its own network of caching and hosting centers. This is useful because much of the content users would be retrieving is actually coming from these centers. On the other hand, coverage may be thin in some parts of the world.
No identifying information is sent to any website other than the IP address that servers can see in an HTTP request. Cloudflare can probably deduce something, mostly about your location and network architecture, from the tests it runs. No results are sent anywhere. Because this an application and not running in a browser, there are no cookies.
Full source is available in this package.
Billions of federal dollars are being disbursed to improve broadband availability and quality, especially in rural areas. Tools are needed to assure that ISPs deliver the quality they promise. This software is a pro bono contribution to getting those tools written.
No claims of any sort are made for this software. It has been tested on Windows 10 and 11, MacOS, and Raspberry Pi OS and should work on other Linux versions but not tested. Use and/or redistribute solely at your own risk. No commitment is made to maintain this software. As noted above, changes made by Cloudflare might break the functionality.
I have no affiliation with Cloudflare, any hosting service, or any ISP (except as a customer).