Re: How to complain about slow ISP? Checked in mtr



On Fri May 30 2008 13:37:12 Dotan Cohen wrote:
It's your ISP's job to find out why the connection is timing
out. If they can't or won't, trying to explain "mtr" to them
isn't going to help. (BTW, your "mtr" was bad but not awful
because of the "2.3%" line.)

Could you elaborate on that? I've stfw but I'm still not quite
proficient with mtr or computers in general.

If an mtr or traceroute or tracepath, after a sufficient number of
iterations, looks like this:

HOP1 20% packet loss
HOP2 30% packet loss
HOP3 2% packet loss
...

- it means that 98-100% of packets are getting to HOP3 and back,
which means that the packet loss at the earlier hops is probably
due to high CPU loads or ICMP rate limiting rather than fundamental
loss of packets in transit. (But there could be more esoteric
causes such as errors in diverse return routes.)

If you really have to use "mtr", first of all compare a regular
"mtr" with a "mtr -i 10" to see if DOS attacks (and "mtr") are
being filtered.

I suppose that I don't _have_ to use mtr but it is the tool that I've
heard of. I changed the interval time to 10 seconds like you mention,
but I don't see where that helps.

If you're sending N test packets per second you may be running afoul
of an ISP's anti-DOS-attack filters. By comparing those results with
results obtained at N/10 test packets per second, you can determine
whether this is a likely explanation.

Is there a resource that you could recommend that I read to learn to
be more proficient with mtr? Written for silly end-users like me?

Sorry, I don't know of one. "mtr" is a tool. A rough analogy would
be me asking for instructions on how to use a screwdriver when my
car is broken. I would need to understand how the car's systems
work in order to understand how to find out what is wrong and how to
fix it.

There are lots of good introductory networking courses available.
I recommend Cisco's CCNA but you might find others more to your taste.
I won't pretend that CCNA (or even CCNP) will explain the full
implications of "mtr" output, but they'll give you enough background
that you will then be able to understand the implications.

--Mike Bird


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