Re: [atlas] Location of probe controllers

2022-02-01 Thread Carsten Schiefner
Thanks, Jaap - On 01.02.2022 20:22, Jaap Akkerhuis wrote: Anand Buddhdev writes: > ... So we > decided to use UN Locodes, as we do with RIPE Atlas anchors. The UN > Locode for Fremont is "us-fnc". Unfortunately, we used just the location > part of it, and did not include the country c

Re: [atlas] Location of probe controllers

2022-02-01 Thread Jaap Akkerhuis
Anand Buddhdev writes: > ... So we > decided to use UN Locodes, as we do with RIPE Atlas anchors. The UN > Locode for Fremont is "us-fnc". Unfortunately, we used just the location > part of it, and did not include the country code, so the bare "FNC" > looks like an IATA code. For detail

Re: [atlas] How to measure ISP speed/uptime via Atlas Probes

2022-02-01 Thread Tim Chown via ripe-atlas
Hi, In the research & education networking world, perfSONAR is the tool commonly used for this. It’s open source, free and available at https://www.perfsonar.net/. The CERN experiment infrastructure around the world has ~1000 perfSONAR nodes deployed, for example. It can be used on everythin

Re: [atlas] Location of probe controllers

2022-02-01 Thread Carsten Schiefner
Alright, understood - sort of… 😵‍💫 > Am 01.02.2022 um 13:44 schrieb Anand Buddhdev : > > On 01/02/2022 12:39, Carsten Schiefner wrote: > > Hi Carsten, > On 31.01.2022 09:44, Robert Kisteleki wrote: >>> >>> It is mostly correct: fnc is Fremont, US west coast. >> is this the proverbial exc

Re: [atlas] How to measure ISP speed/uptime via Atlas Probes

2022-02-01 Thread Ponikierski, Grzegorz via ripe-atlas
AFAIK Atlas probes cannot be scripted and they were never designed to do speed tests. Folks form RIPE can correct me if I'm wrong. What you look for can be probably fulfilled by other measurement tools like for example SamKnows but I don't know if they sell probes for individuals. Alternatively,

Re: [atlas] Location of probe controllers

2022-02-01 Thread Anand Buddhdev
On 01/02/2022 12:39, Carsten Schiefner wrote: Hi Carsten, On 31.01.2022 09:44, Robert Kisteleki wrote: It is mostly correct: fnc is Fremont, US west coast. is this the proverbial exception to the rule? As FNC indeed stands for Funchal: https://www.iata.org/en/publications/directories/code-

Re: [atlas] How to measure ISP speed/uptime via Atlas Probes

2022-02-01 Thread Dr Eberhard W Lisse
Ray, thanks. I meant more or less continuously, but your comment makes sense. I assume I can look at uptime by downloading JSON from the GUI. Is there a way of scripting this? Has anyone looked at this using R? el On 01/02/2022 13:29, Ray Bellis wrote: On 01/02/2022 11:22, Dr Eberhard W

Re: [atlas] Location of probe controllers

2022-02-01 Thread Carsten Schiefner
Hi Robert, On 31.01.2022 09:44, Robert Kisteleki wrote: >> My guesses from the DNS names are based on IATA airport codes: >> >> ctr-ams02.atlas.ripe.net (Amsterdam, NL) >> ctr-ams03.atlas.ripe.net (Amsterdam, NL) >> ctr-ewr01.atlas.ripe.net (Newark, NJ, US) >> ctr-fnc01.atlas.ripe.net (Funchal, PT

Re: [atlas] How to measure ISP speed/uptime via Atlas Probes

2022-02-01 Thread Ray Bellis
On 01/02/2022 11:22, Dr Eberhard W Lisse wrote: Hi, I have a few probes in my house(s) and practice and I wonder whether it is possible to measure the uptime (and speed) of all or some of them on a more or less continuous basis, and if so how one would go about it. Total amateur that I am I

[atlas] How to measure ISP speed/uptime via Atlas Probes

2022-02-01 Thread Dr Eberhard W Lisse
Hi, I have a few probes in my house(s) and practice and I wonder whether it is possible to measure the uptime (and speed) of all or some of them on a more or less continuous basis, and if so how one would go about it. Total amateur that I am I would appreciate pointers to where I can read that u