Monitoring Your Broadband Connection with Raspberry Pi

Constant outages of your broadband can drive you to frustration, but you can use the Raspberry Pi, and a little bit cloud to monitor it.

If there's one thing that's the same about everyone's broadband connection, is that it's slow. Usually slower than it was advertised to be when you got it. But slow isn't as irritating as sporadic, when you get constant drops and outages it can drive you to frustration.

It drove one man in Washington D.C. to monitor his broadband connection with a Raspberry Pi, and automatically tweet Comcast when his connection drops to a fraction of advertised speed.

This is actually something I've been doing myself for a couple of years, also using a Raspberry Pi stuffed in corner of my network closet. Well, not the bit where I tweet my broadband provider. Instead my script is a bit more direct, it automatically submits a trouble ticket into their support queue.

Over the time I've been doing this I've used various methods to measure the latency and speed of my broadband connection. Most recently I've switched to using speedtest-cli, a command line interface to the speedtest.net servers written in Python.

It's really easy to install. Just open up a terminal window on your Raspberry Pi and type the following at the command line,

$ sudo apt-get install python-pip
$ pip install speedtest-cli

this will install pip â€” a package management system for python — if you don't already have it installed, and then the speedtest-cli package from the pip repositories.

Once installed it's rather easy to grab measure your broadband speed.

$ speedtest-cli
Retrieving speedtest.net configuration...
Retrieving speedtest.net server list...
Testing from Acme Broadband Provider. (XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX)...
Selecting best server based on latency...
Hosted by Foo Limited (Metropolis) [2.52 km]: 35.27 ms
Testing download speed........................................
Download: 14.47 Mbit/s
Testing upload speed..................................................
Upload: 1.46 Mbit/s
$

Although I've disguised other details, that really is my average reported broadband speed. I have an ADSL2+ Annex M connection, unfortunately FTTC hasn't quite made it to my parts of the world.

While this is my average speed, it's well below what I'm paying for, which is 25 Mbit/s down and 2.5 Mbit/s up. However I've more or less given up on obtaining that, these days I'm just happy if it's stable. Because, every so often, I go through patches where my latency rises to several hundred milliseconds, and my bandwidth drops to 1 or 2 Mbit/s. These periods can go on for days.

Which makes me rather jealous of our friend in Washington, who is complaining to Comcast when his 150Mbit/s connection drops to a low of 50Mbit/s.

In any case, now we have out command line tool installed we can run it automatically using cron â€” which allows you to schedule commands to run at specified times — every hour, and log the output to a file.

The easiest way to do this is to create a quick script, lets call it speedtest-cron.sh which will log the date and the output of the test to a file,

#!/bin/bash 

date >> /home/pi/speedtest.log
/usr/local/bin/speedtest --simple >> /home/pi/speedtest.log

Then go ahead and edit your crontab file, adding an entry to run the script test once an hour. You can do that by typing,

$ crontab -e

at the command line, and then adding the line,

0 * * * * /home/pi/speedtest-cron.sh

to the crontab file before saving it. This will run the test once an hour, at the top of the hour, appending the dates-stamped output of the speedtest command to a log file.

$ cat speedtest.log 
Sun Jan 31 19:49:01 GMT 2016
Ping: 34.961 ms
Download: 14.44 Mbit/s
Upload: 1.41 Mbit/s
$

However the output of the speedtest-cli package, even in its “simple” mode, is pretty messy. We could go into the package and fix things so that the output is somewhat more useful, CSV format perhaps, or we could rewrite the whole thing in Perl. But since this is a quick hack, it's probably easiest just to fix things with a bash script.

Which is exactly what the speedtest-cli-extras script does. It captures the output of the script, reformats it, and outputs it on a single line with time stamps and values separated by semicolons,

$ git clone https://github.com/HenrikBengtsson/speedtest-cli-extras.git
$ cd speedtest-cli-extras/bin
$ ./speedtest-csv
2016-01-31 17:00:33;2016-01-31 17:01:27;Acme Broadband Provider;XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX;Foo Limited (Metropolis);2.52 km;34.768 ms;14.43 Mbit/s;1.31 Mbit/s;http://www.speedtest.net/result/XXXXXXXXXX.png
$

again with names changed to protect the guilty. As you can see the output is much more useful, especially if we want to create graphs, than we had previously. Running this every hour from cron is going to start to pile up evidence in a nicely formatted data file, hopefully allowing us to have a satisfying argument with our broadband provider inside a few days.

Except that, while I'm on the road, I don't want to have to SSH into the Raspberry Pi connected to my ADSL modem, grab the CSV file, and manually post it the trouble ticket I've filed with my broadband provider.

This is where IFTTT‘s Maker Channel, introduced towards the middle of last year, comes in handy. I went ahead and created a recipe on IFTTT to take the data passed to Maker Channel event called “speedtest” and automatically fill a Google Sheet with the output of speedtest-cli script.

The easiest way to get the data from our Raspberry Pi to IFTTT at this point is to modify the speedtest-cli-extras script. Instead of printing out the output to a log file, we'll make a POST web request with the event name and our secret key — the key is assigned when you connect the channel — of the form,

https://maker.ifttt.com/trigger/speedtest/with/key/{secret_key}

with a JSON body consisting of  three values — the latency, download, and upload speeds — to be passed on to the action in the recipe.

#!/usr/bin/env bash 
###########################################################################
# Originally written by: Henrik Bengtsson, 2014
# https://github.com/HenrikBengtsson/speedtest-cli-extras
# Modified to use IFTTT by: Alasdair Allan, 2015
# License: GPL (>= 2.1) [http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html]
###########################################################################
<br/>
# Character for separating values
# (commas are not safe, because some servers return speeds with commas)
sep=";"
<br/>
# Temporary file holding speedtest-cli output
user=$USER
if test -z $user; then
  user=$USERNAME
fi
log=/tmp/$user/speedtest-csv.log
<br/>
# Local functions
function str_extract() {
 pattern=$1
 # Extract
 res=`grep "$pattern" $log | sed "s/$pattern//g"`
 # Drop trailing ...
 res=`echo $res | sed 's/[.][.][.]//g'`
 # Trim
 res=`echo $res | sed 's/^ *//g' | sed 's/ *$//g'`
 echo $res
}
<br/>
# Display header?
if test "$1" = "--header"; then
  start="start"
  stop="stop"
  from="from"
  from_ip="from_ip"
  server="server"
  server_dist="server_dist"
  server_ping="server_ping"
  download="download"
  upload="upload"
  share_url="share_url"
else
  mkdir -p `dirname $log`
<br/>
  start=`date +"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"`
<br/>
  if test -n "$SPEEDTEST_CSV_SKIP" && test -f "$log"; then
    # Reuse existing results (useful for debugging)
    1>&2 echo "** Reusing existing results: $log"
  else
    # Query Speedtest
    /usr/local/bin/speedtest-cli --share > $log
  fi
  stop=`date +"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"`
  # Parse
  from=`str_extract "Testing from "`
  from_ip=`echo $from | sed 's/.*(//g' | sed 's/).*//g'`
  from=`echo $from | sed 's/ (.*//g'`
  server=`str_extract "Hosted by "`
  server_ping=`echo $server | sed 's/.*: //g'`
  server=`echo $server | sed 's/: .*//g'`
  server_dist=`echo $server | sed 's/.*\\[//g' | sed 's/\\].*//g'`
  server=`echo $server | sed 's/ \\[.*//g'`
  download=`str_extract "Download: "`
  upload=`str_extract "Upload: "`
  share_url=`str_extract "Share results: "`
fi
<br/>
# Standardize units?
if test "$1" = "--standardize"; then
  download=`echo $download | sed 's/Mbits/Mbit/'`
  upload=`echo $upload | sed 's/Mbits/Mbit/'`
fi
<br/>
# Send to IFTTT
secret_key="SECRET_KEY"
value1=`echo $server_ping | cut -d" " -f1`
value2=`echo $download | cut -d" " -f1`
value3=`echo $upload | cut -d" " -f1` 
json="{\"value1\":\"${value1}\",\"value2\":\"${value2}\",\"value3\":\"${value3}\"}"
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d "${json}" https://maker.ifttt.com/trigger/speedtest/with/key/${secret_key}

After you download it you should go ahead and substitute your own SECRET_KEY before testing it out by running the modified script manually at the command line. If all goes well you should see something like this,

$ ./speedtest-ifttt.sh Congratulations! You've fired the speedtest event
$

Go ahead and check your Google Drive, there should be a new Sheet called “Speedtest.”

Source: Monitoring Your Broadband Connection with Raspberry Pi


About The Author

Muhammad Bilal

I am highly skilled and motivated individual with a Master's degree in Computer Science. I have extensive experience in technical writing and a deep understanding of SEO practices.

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