Network Performance Testing? 18
ItsMr.Data asks: "Recently, the department I work in has been planning on rolling out a new gigabit backbone network. We have been looking for ways to test network congestion. I am looking for a simple but accurate tool to test different paths through the network. I looked at Iperf, but I wonder what other test setups are out there, and if any are customizable to emulate differing types of traffic, such as streaming media, file sharing traffic, and video conferencing. So, what network performance testing setups do you use?"
you're halfway there (Score:3, Funny)
Tried and true method... (Score:2)
MRTG (Score:5, Informative)
First, make sure every device speaks SNMP.
Then, get MRTG up and running. By default, it'll discover devices and poll every interface every 5 minutes. If you want faster polling, you will need RRDTool. The intergration of both of these is well documented.
Next, configure some of the advanced options. Things like dropped packets, malformed packets, failed logins, mail spool sizes, temprature, CPU and Memory utilization can all be checked. The temp, CPU, and memory are great for showing if a router is too small for it's current tasking.
Finally, get one of the really cool web-based frontends for MRTG's data. Most of these show all the devices and allow you to click to drill down to specific interfaces on specific routers.
It took me about 3 months to get it all working right. Once it was in place, management was like 'ooh, graphs and charts'. Very nice stuff.
Re:MRTG (Score:4, Insightful)
I've been an HP Openview consultant in a previous life, and MRTG+RRDTool is at least as good in terms of reporting and data management as anything HP has to offer. On top of that, it's free, simple to set up and doesn't require a lot of grunt to drive it.
Re:MRTG (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.cacti.net
Re:MRTG (Score:3, Insightful)
The best way to test... (Score:2, Funny)
Slashdot (Score:1)
Comment removed (Score:3)
Forge (Score:3, Informative)
1) Generate a variety of network traffic types VoIP, Ethernet, TCP/IP, HTTP,
2) Allows you to simulate different network environments (T1, FT1, OC2, GigE, DSL, DialUp)
One tool Cisco uses (Score:5, Informative)
Reporting... (Score:1)
they are expensive though.. find someone who sells them, and ask for a demo (it's what we did
Commercial Load Tests (Score:3, Insightful)
ADtech is famous for their ATM test equipment
IXIA http://www.ixiacom.com/ is a newcomer on the block, but is run by seasoned pros and
Empirix (formerly hammer) makes loads of application specific test equipment.
Iperia does a lot of voip testing, but they are more of an ISDN/SS7 test equipment manufacturer.
-n
network games ;) (Score:1)
(although its more like 3D-Performance testing
Apple: HELIOS_LanTest (Score:1)
http://www.helios.de/pub/utilities/
http://www.helios.de/pub/utilities/HELIOS_LanTe