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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] Suggestions for poor FTTH performance
- Date: Fri, 14 Apr 2017 11:57:24 +0900
- From: Curt Sampson <cjs@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] Suggestions for poor FTTH performance
- User-agent: Mutt/1.5.21 (2010-09-15)
As Furkan points out, there are two different setups that are common: fiber direct from the Central Office to your rooms, and (usually shared) fiber to the MDF (Main Distribution Frame) in an apartment building and then SDSL over copper (usually the in-building telephone lines) from the MDF to your apartment. The former I believe is usually called "home fiber" and the latter "mansion fiber." You can usually tell the former because you have actual optical fiber in one of your rooms, connected to a modem that turns it into Ethernet. For the latter, you'll have copper (usually from your telephone jack) coming into the SDSL modem which is converted to Ethernet on the other side. When I got my Mansion fiber I watched the installer test the SDSL and he was getting somewhere betweeen 80 and 90 Mbps. I think I actually got a document then or later documenting this test as well. You'll note that this is a lot faster than an ADSL link all the way back to the CO; this is as expected since it's a much shorter link. (Typically a few dozen or a hundred meters rather than hundreds or even thousands of meters.) If you're on Mansion fiber especially, and you have any number of other folks in your building, your speeds may be heavily affected by the time of day. That's one of the first things I'd check out. Anyway, whichever sort of local loop you end up with, eventually your link goes back to the CO where it gets hooked up through NTT's metropolitan network to your ISP, and everything beyond that point is on the ISP, not the local loop provider. And that's usually where the bandwidth restrictions happen. I use Asahi as one of my two Internet providers at home (both go over the same Mansion fiber). They definitely do throttling, because I've seen dramatic examples of this on massive outbound web server traffic (which is not unexpected, this was a dramatic misuse of a home Internet link). Personally I seem to get about the full bandwidth of my connection (around 9 MB/sec) when downloading games from Steam for the first 20 GB or so, and then the rate drops to 1 MB/sec. Pausing the download and letting it sit for 15-30 minutes seems to let it restart at 9 MB/sec. again. This could be related to how Steam provides the downloads, too, but Asahi seems to be the more likely culprit. Given that this appears to be way beyond the performance you're getting, my guess would be that it's not likely Asahi that's throttling you; it's either problems with your local loop or the testing sites you're using. A quick check with testmy.net at work gave me a 49.3 Mbps download via gigabit fiber and OCN as the ISP, so these guys don't seem too bad, but it still seemed that they were sending from a server in Texas, which is not how you want to be testing. (You're more likely to see throttling of various sorts on cross-ocean links than to local content providers.) I suggest you start by checking with sites that have content distribution from servers in Japan. Using the `mtr` program can help with this. cjs -- Curt Sampson <cjs@example.com> +81 90 7737 2974 To iterate is human, to recurse divine. - L Peter Deutsch
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