Rich Brown writes:
> Here's the log file: https://pastebin.com/aBXCgjD1
>
> NB I'll be away for the weekend, so won't follow up for a while.
> Thanks.
Looks like those are the actual ping times reported by fping:
[1567795827.309700] flent-fremont.bufferbloat.net : [175], 84 bytes, 95.5 ms
Here's the log file: https://pastebin.com/aBXCgjD1
NB I'll be away for the weekend, so won't follow up for a while. Thanks.
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Rich Brown writes:
> Hmmm, not this time... What else could I check?
>
> ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1094930/64439228-7e5a5880-d097-11e9-9068-1f80fd634be7.png)
If you turn on debug logging during the test run (-L option), that log
will include the actual output of the
Hmmm, not this time... What else could I check?
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1094930/64439228-7e5a5880-d097-11e9-9068-1f80fd634be7.png)
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Pete Heist writes:
> Currently, the output filenames for batches always include batch_time:
>
> def gen_filename(self, settings, batch, argset, rep):
> filename = "batch-%s-%s-%s" % (
> settings.BATCH_NAME,
> batch['batch_time'],
>
Currently, the output filenames for batches always include `batch_time`:
```
def gen_filename(self, settings, batch, argset, rep):
filename = "batch-%s-%s-%s" % (
settings.BATCH_NAME,
batch['batch_time'],
batch.get('filename_extra', "%s-%s" %
Using Flent 1.3.0 with fping 4.2 on macOS 10.2.6:
I see high ping times (>100 msec in the following report) despite the fact that
actual ping times (measured by fping during the flent test) are 20-30 msec, and
none higher that 47 msec. (I am on 7mbps/768kbps DSL, so the 6.95mbps seems