Hi!

 

Eren, thank you for additional probe in Atlas network, I will for sure use it :D

 

I can add 2 reason that stops some people from using your probe.

 

  1. Some people (like me) for various valid reasons cannot use general Atlas setting for probe allocation like "give me all probes from Ireland". Such people use more sophisticated algorithms to use probes that they are interested in and they refresh their private probe list every X days/weeks. Your probe looks quite fresh so probably you have to wait for cronjob to update researchers' probes lists ;)
  2. Your probe is pretty fresh so it doesn't have system tags like 'IPv4 Stable 1d' or 'IPv4 Stable 90d'. I know people that uses only probes with 'IPv4 Stable 30d' or better. Their argument is that they want to use only stable probes which can give them comparable samples over time. And this is a good approach if you have big measurement network but I personally think that Atlas is still too small in many countries so using only 'IPv4 Stable 30d' or better can heavily reduce number of samples that you get. Probes come and go so we should use whatever is available if our objective is to make large scale measurement globally.

 

In short, don't worry. With time you should see more measurements. Remember also that for some researches your location and provider that you use can be just no interesting.

 

Regards,

Grzegorz

 

From: Antonios Chariton <daknob.mac@gmail.com>
Date: Saturday 2018-08-25 at 15:17
To: Eren Türkay <turkay.eren@gmail.com>
Cc: "ripe-atlas@ripe.net" <ripe-atlas@ripe.net>
Subject: Re: [atlas] Getting More Traffic for Probe

 

In general I believe the RIPE Atlas network is heavily underutilized. I can confirm the low traffic too:

 

http://44.128.63.10/rrdash/rrd.php?from=-2400000&to=-30&graph=atlas

 

Now there are a few reasons that this could happen, but in general I believe the entire network is like this, and not just specific probes..

 

The reasons can be:

 

i) People just don’t have anything to measure, so they don’t send new measurements

ii) People think credits are actually super important, and want to keep them

iii) People believe current measurements are too expensive, so theoretically if everything costed 10x less, there would be 10x the measurements.

 

Now personally I think that it’s just (i), but I can’t actually really tell. Changing the available bandwidth from the RIPE Atlas page seems to not affect the bandwidth used. On the other hand, somehow the traffic is relatively constant at 7-8 Kb/s, and then moved up to like 8-9 Kb/s.. I do not think RIPE Atlas has 100% evenly distributed measurements, so there’s possibly some mechanism to distribute the load uniformly?



On 25 Aug 2018, at 15:02, Eren Türkay <turkay.eren@gmail.com> wrote:

 

Hello,

 

I am running a probe [0] at my home and I have 240Mbit connection from my provider. When I look at the graphs, this probe is basically sitting idle doing nothing! I can spare 20Mbit/s easily for measurements to keep the usage. However, I do not know how to achieve that.

 

Is it possible to attract more traffic to my probe? I'm sure there is some algorithm involved to distribute the work so if you can please get me some more work, I'd be pleased [obviously more credits to spare :)]

 

 

Regards,


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