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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] Tokyo ISP Throttling? Why does my internet speed increase so much by setting up a proxy?
- Date: Fri, 26 Feb 2016 11:13:43 +0800
- From: Raymond Wan <rwan.kyoto@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] Tokyo ISP Throttling? Why does my internet speed increase so much by setting up a proxy?
- References: <CAAcd6GqhTNOq=vmX7Yr4uEZM5Ef1zxqRdh-kOe612vis3j-D6A@mail.gmail.com> <CAAhy3dvW+F7fT+VHHw-+e20suvpjqHd4M2cufuVDqCD9rb1krQ@mail.gmail.com> <22218.25385.445552.84107@turnbull.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp> <CAAhy3dtJuB_5UoyUYd_N1O1mvrsaS51-hM9+SLAvwNrMa2kYqA@mail.gmail.com> <22218.35294.16255.971742@turnbull.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp> <CAAhy3dvgBdkUrZ_5PnVgRjPitqVuQFPHrxRjF3FUF4LxVZmWhA@mail.gmail.com> <CAAhy3dvYdy8ZovkW6ZB_QiQmgowPm79bn+W_xQ1_Mms3qUdCHw@mail.gmail.com> <22221.15806.30241.456741@turnbull.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp>
On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 1:21 PM, Stephen J. Turnbull <stephen@example.com> wrote: > Raymond Wan writes: > > > >>From home, 9 hops is required. It spends some time around Hong Kong a > > bit, staying within servers belonging to the ISP. Then it jumps > > directly to Oregon and then to California. > > > > Meanwhile, from work, 14 hops is required. It bounces around Hong > > Kong a bit longer, including spending some time on a "HK University > > Backbone" -- I presume this is a shared backbone for all universities > > in the city. Then it goes off to the UK, and then enters the USA. > > It's just like a local train, stops are basically more costly than > distance. The long distances are covered basically at the speed of > light, maybe as low as 50ms certainly less than 100ms, and I bet > you're looking at ping times in the 400-600ms range. Not that bad. From home about 250 ms; from work about 175 ms. Thanks for the local train analogy -- that certainly helps! > > but maybe the different path and more hops plays a bigger part in > > download times? > > Path as such doesn't matter (the Russian Mafia isn't siphoning off > packets to sell to Columbian druglords or anything like that), and a > factor of 2 in distance is probably a secondary consideration in any > case. More hops matters for two reasons, both probabilistic. First, > every hop is a chance to encounter congestion and have packets > dropped. Second, every hop is a chance to encounter a configuration > problem, and perhaps have packets fragmented. More fragments (which > at the IP level are just packets that can be dropped) means a higher > probability of a corrupt packet that must be retransmitted, and that > slows things down, even in a streaming protocol. > > The other thing is that I wouldn't be surprised if ICMP (Internet > Control Message Protocol) packets get a higher priority and faster > relay in many cases than TCP packets. I see. I didn't quite realize all this but it does make sense. I really should have spent more time understanding networks a bit more. Experiencing a slow[er] network at work became a good reason to begin to understand the results of ping -- I mean other than the basic "yes, the computer is up; no, it is not"... > > The university is suppose to upgrade its network "over the next few > > years" so maybe we an see some improvement...but I don't think > > there's anything we can do to alter the path it takes to the USA... > > The university could buy connectivity from your home ISP. :-) > > Or you could borrow the connectivity you already have. One thing I do > a lot is use SSH tunnels from home.[1] It's possible to use these > tunnels (or specialized applications) to set up a personal VPN. Then > you can (quite safely) reach your box at home from work without > opening it up to all kinds of evil. I'd probably need to read up a lot more before attempting that. Of course, I'm more worried about getting the security right. But I may have to consider it if one of my tasks is to look at "big data" and the data is "too big" to transfer from my workplace's Internet connection... Thanks a lot for the pointers! [To Scott as well about x2go; will look into that, too!] Ray
- References:
- [tlug] Tokyo ISP Throttling? Why does my internet speed increase so much by setting up a proxy?
- From: Jawaad Mahmood
- Re: [tlug] Tokyo ISP Throttling? Why does my internet speed increase so much by setting up a proxy?
- From: Raymond Wan
- Re: [tlug] Tokyo ISP Throttling? Why does my internet speed increase so much by setting up a proxy?
- From: Stephen J. Turnbull
- Re: [tlug] Tokyo ISP Throttling? Why does my internet speed increase so much by setting up a proxy?
- From: Raymond Wan
- Re: [tlug] Tokyo ISP Throttling? Why does my internet speed increase so much by setting up a proxy?
- From: Stephen J. Turnbull
- Re: [tlug] Tokyo ISP Throttling? Why does my internet speed increase so much by setting up a proxy?
- From: Raymond Wan
- Re: [tlug] Tokyo ISP Throttling? Why does my internet speed increase so much by setting up a proxy?
- From: Raymond Wan
- Re: [tlug] Tokyo ISP Throttling? Why does my internet speed increase so much by setting up a proxy?
- From: Stephen J. Turnbull
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