The speedtest-cli-extras repository contains tools that enhance the speedtest-cli command-line interface to speedtest.net for benchmarking an internet connection.
- The
speedtest-csv
tool requires:- a Bash shell or be called via
bash speedtest-csv
. speedtest-cli
which in turn requires Python.- that
speedtest-cli
is on thePATH
or in the same directory asspeedtest-csv
.
- a Bash shell or be called via
Windows users: The MinGW project's MSYS package is an straightforward way to
get Bash on Windows. Note, there is a speedtest-csv.bat
Windows Batch wrapper
script that calls the Bash script for you. In other words, if you call
speedtest-csv
at the Windows command prompt, it will work just as if you
called it from Bash. Regardless, you do need Bash also on Windows.
The speedtest-csv
tool calls speedtest-cli
, captures its multi-line output,
reformats it, adds time stamps, and outputs the benchmark statistics on a
single well formatted line, e.g.
$ speedtest-csv --header
start stop from from_ip server server_dist (km) server_ping (ms) download (Mbit/s) upload (Mbit/s) share_url
$ speedtest-csv
2016-04-04 16:35:01 2016-04-04 16:35:51 Comcast Cable 24.130.241.190 Fastmetrics Inc. (San Francisco, CA) 20.46 18.168 4.88 1.34 http://www.speedtest.net/result/5224137223.png
By running the above on a regular basis (e.g. once an hour) and appending the output to a TAB-delimited file one can gather statistics over time. To add meaningful column names to the top of this file, start off by adding a header:
$ speedtest-csv --header > speedtest_stats.tsv
# At 00:00 UTC
$ speedtest-csv >> speedtest_stats.tsv
# At 01:00 UTC
$ speedtest-csv >> speedtest_stats.tsv
# ...
$ less speedtest_stats.tsv
start stop from from_ip server server_dist server_ping download upload share_url
2016-04-04 08:00:01 2016-04-04 08:01:01 Comcast Cable 24.130.241.190 Fastmetrics Inc. (San Francisco, CA) 20.46 18.168 4.88 1.34 http://www.speedtest.net/result/5224137223.png
2016-04-04 09:00:02 2016-04-04 09:00:42 Comcast Cable 24.130.241.190 Monkey Brains (San Francisco, CA) 21.36 16.723 3.40 0.21 http://www.speedtest.net/result/5224152283.png
[...]
If you're on Linux or macOS, you can use Cron jobs to automate the above.
$ speedtest-csv --help
speedtest-csv 2.0.1
Usage:
speedtest-csv [options]
Options:
--header Display field names (only)
--header-units Units (ms, Mbit/s and km) are in header (default)
--no-header-units Units are in the values
--standardize Standardize units and number formats (default)
--no-standardize Disable --standardize
--share Generate and provide a URL to the speedtest.net
share results image (default)
--no-share Disable --share
--quote <str> Quote fields using <str> (default: none)
--sep <str> Separate fields using <str> (default '\t')
--help This help
--version Display version
--debug Output extra debug information
--last Use most recent stats, if available
(avoids calling `speedtest-cli`)
Any other options are passed to speedtest-cli as is.
Example:
speedtest-csv --header
speedtest-csv
# Defaults in speedtest-csv (<= 1.3.0):
speedtest-csv --sep ';' --no-standardize --no-header-units
Installed dependencies:
speedtest-cli 1.0.1 (https://github.com/sivel/speedtest-cli)
python 2.7.12
Copyright: 2014-2017 Henrik Bengtsson
License: GPL (>= 2.1) (https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html)
As of Nov 2016, speedtest-cli (>= 1.0.0) itself supports outputting the results a single comma-separated value line. The format is slightly different from here, but the idea is very similar.