Ok, that can be nice to have for testing as well!
Our speedtest server (LibreSpeed) does show you the source IP when doing a test, so you
can verify if it is your Net44 IP. But as it is reachable via internet, when your own
network
also routes to internet, there is no way to determine if you reach it via the open
internet or
via a tunnel.
At least in the speedtest tool itself. Of course you can do a traceroute -I to see the
path.
(without the -I option for ICMP the traceroute will stop at our gateway)
The speedtest server is connected to internet (and the IPIP tunnels) at 10 Gbps. At
least,
it should be. I don't think I have ever seen test results above 1 Gbps, and I have no
access
to an internet connection that fast to test that myself.
Rob
On 10/11/22 02:28, lleachii--- via 44net wrote:
Harold,
http://44.60.44.10/whatismyip/
http://kb3vwg-010.ampr.org/whatismyip/
Here is a valid test on the HTTP site to determine your source IP on a client at the QTH
for example.
44.60.44.254 - this is a only available on AMPR (there is no DNS record to on AMPRGW -
NTP, DNS - filtered for ADs should respond) **do not** set this for any clients, this is
an infrastructure IP in my /24 network. This is the IP announced on YO2LOJ's map
- KB3VWG
On Monday, October 10, 2022 at 05:27:34 PM EDT, Rob PE1CHL via 44net
<44net(a)mailman.ampr.org> wrote:
When you want to test the performance, you can also use
http://speedtest.pi9noz.ampr.org/
<http://speedtest.pi9noz.ampr.org/>
However, it is now also available from internet, so it is not possible to test if your
tunnel routing really works.
Rob