F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks Tool for checking network connections

Tool for checking network connections

Tool for checking network connections

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aaron1506
Member
207
06-05-2025, 08:13 AM
#1
Yes, there are tools designed to scan networks and identify issues affecting performance. While WireShark is popular, you can use specialized network analyzers or packet sniffers with filtering capabilities to pinpoint bottlenecks. Consider adding specific filters for traffic types, ports, or protocols to narrow down the cause of slow speeds.
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aaron1506
06-05-2025, 08:13 AM #1

Yes, there are tools designed to scan networks and identify issues affecting performance. While WireShark is popular, you can use specialized network analyzers or packet sniffers with filtering capabilities to pinpoint bottlenecks. Consider adding specific filters for traffic types, ports, or protocols to narrow down the cause of slow speeds.

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liamkknight
Junior Member
20
06-05-2025, 04:04 PM
#2
Check the route using tracert commands.
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liamkknight
06-05-2025, 04:04 PM #2

Check the route using tracert commands.

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Veghtam
Junior Member
15
06-05-2025, 05:14 PM
#3
Thank you, I'll examine it. Could it reveal any potential bottlenecks?
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Veghtam
06-05-2025, 05:14 PM #3

Thank you, I'll examine it. Could it reveal any potential bottlenecks?

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123Patat
Junior Member
10
06-05-2025, 06:26 PM
#4
We need to understand your specific delay issues—latency, data speed, or network overload—so we can pinpoint the best starting point.
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123Patat
06-05-2025, 06:26 PM #4

We need to understand your specific delay issues—latency, data speed, or network overload—so we can pinpoint the best starting point.

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HerrSommer
Junior Member
18
06-06-2025, 08:31 PM
#5
PRTG is free, yet extremely thorough. Checking AngryIP Scanner is useful, and Glasswire might assist too, but begin with PRTG.
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HerrSommer
06-06-2025, 08:31 PM #5

PRTG is free, yet extremely thorough. Checking AngryIP Scanner is useful, and Glasswire might assist too, but begin with PRTG.

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XxDinosaurkXx
Member
73
06-06-2025, 09:41 PM
#6
HyperSpeed is the preferred choice among system administrators for evaluating network performance.
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XxDinosaurkXx
06-06-2025, 09:41 PM #6

HyperSpeed is the preferred choice among system administrators for evaluating network performance.

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FeetGreen
Junior Member
47
06-07-2025, 06:43 PM
#7
Thanks for your feedback. I understand the challenges you're facing as a junior. It sounds like the process is slow and complicated due to network limitations and office conditions. Let's try to simplify it together. @jj9987
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FeetGreen
06-07-2025, 06:43 PM #7

Thanks for your feedback. I understand the challenges you're facing as a junior. It sounds like the process is slow and complicated due to network limitations and office conditions. Let's try to simplify it together. @jj9987

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agatestarling6
Junior Member
2
06-08-2025, 11:19 AM
#8
Here’s your summary:
I’m looking for details on the speeds, switches, link connections, server type, storage, and I need your exact wording to reply. Please confirm so I can notify you accordingly.
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agatestarling6
06-08-2025, 11:19 AM #8

Here’s your summary:
I’m looking for details on the speeds, switches, link connections, server type, storage, and I need your exact wording to reply. Please confirm so I can notify you accordingly.

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HotMilkTea
Member
204
06-08-2025, 01:38 PM
#9
We're achieving 1GB per second from a PC using Ethernet. Adjust the copy-paste speed to fall between 81kbps and 1.20mbps as needed. The device is a Netgear ProSAFE S3300-52X, with Synology RS3617RPxs servers in place.
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HotMilkTea
06-08-2025, 01:38 PM #9

We're achieving 1GB per second from a PC using Ethernet. Adjust the copy-paste speed to fall between 81kbps and 1.20mbps as needed. The device is a Netgear ProSAFE S3300-52X, with Synology RS3617RPxs servers in place.