Analyser la neutralité de votre accès à Internet
On retrouve une série d'outils ici http://respectmynet.eu/start/
In some situations it would be quite handy to run Netalyzr remotely, for example to test connectivity of a machine whose user has just reported problems, or to schedule a run at a particular time of the day. To accomodate these use cases, we now provide a Netalyzr command-line client in addition to the web-based applet. The client executes exactly the same code as the applet running in a browser—the only difference is that the tests are wrapped into a stand-alone, text-only Java application instead of an applet.
To use the command-line client, download the JAR archive below and execute it as shown. More help on running JAR-packaged code is available here. Once Netalyzr is running, you will see textual feedback at the console that looks very much like the one presented during a web-based Netalyzr session:
$ java -jar NetalyzrCLI.jar
==== ICSI Netalyzr CLI, build 37456 ====
==== 15-03-2011 22:36:30 UTC ====
==== ID ae81b058-11263-d2e5cc18-13c9-4d4d-b78c ====
00:02 02/91 Checking local vs. global IP address...
The last line of the output updates continuously, showing total test time and the currently executing test. Once the tests complete, the client reports the URL at which you can inspect the session's results.
The client has a few flags of note which should assist those who want to invoke Netalyzr from another program
-m {MODE}: Execute the command line client with the specified mode flag
-q: Quiet mode, only outputs the final URL
-s: Simple mode, doesn't try to do fancing text based formatting
The command-line client is a new feature. We'd be glad to hear your feedback
The goal of our Glasnost project is to make access networks, such as residential cable, DSL, and cellular broadband networks, more transparent to their customers.
ISPs are increasingly deploying a variety of middleboxes (e.g., firewalls, traffic shapers, censors, and redirectors) to monitor and to manipulate the performance of user applications. Most ISPs do not reveal the details of their network deployments to their customers. We believe that this knowledge is important to help users make a more informed choice of their ISP. Further, such knowledge is also useful for researchers designing protocols and systems that run on top of these networks.
To improve network transparency, we are building online tools that are easy to use and publishing them on this web page. Currently, there are two tools you could use to test your ISP. We will release more tools as we develop them in the future.