It is [documented that the executeCommandLine syntax has changed in OH3 (sorry, aren’t allowed too many links). Now that speedtest is installed, run it with following command to accept the license and then again to make sure the output comes back as json sudo -u openhab speedtest Then run at the prompt: sudo apt-get update Needs to contain the following line for apt to find the package (replace “raspbian” with “debian”, and assuming you’re using “buster”): deb buster main The file in /etc/apt//ookla_speedtest-cli.list If you’re uncomfortable running a shell script downloaded blindly (you probably should be), as the instructions suggest, there’s also step by step instructions. I followed the instructions but needed to make a modification. They now reference the package at packagecloud, linked by kristofejiro above. The official install from Ookla has changed somewhat. I followed the uninstall commands in the OP anyway, but this did nothing. For the benefit of others, what I needed to change is below.Ī fresh openhabian install did not include speedtest-cli. I hope I’m not duplicating too much, I couldn’t find much of this spelt out. Several things have changed since the OP. This caused me some pain after upgrading from 2.5 straight to 3.1, both installs using openHABian. If you run your typical setup in parallel, you’ll always use up bandwidth from your mobiles, your SmartTVs, your Alexas, … directly connect your RPi4 to your router - with a vanilla raspbian lite running only speedtest CLI.disconnect each and every network client, be it wifi or LAN.That said: the best way to get a “true” bandwith test is to even if you used Cat5/6/7 cables and true gigabit switches and stuff, they still may not deliver true gigabit, depending on how you crimped the cables or how they’re bent in the curves, which patch cables you use, etc. If you’re using speedtest via Wifi, you get all kinds of stuff - but nothing reliableīased on how your network is built and which components you have at hand, this one could also be a pretty serious bottleneck. But seeing you’re speed capped at about 100Mbit, my bet is on a RPi3 B only Your RPi3 (if it’s model B+) can at best use a gigabit ethernet “over USB”, which means, it’s still limited to about 300Mbit. In real life, the bandwidth is also dependend on other things going on inside the Raspberry Pi. Please be aware, that only RPi4 uses a gigabit ethernet card on th SoC, which allows (theroretically) “full 1000Mbit”. results may vary, regarding on load of device and your infrastructure.the most important one: only RPi4 uses “true” gigabit ethernet.You have to be aware of many things here: Openhabian (I’m still on openhab2) is running on a pi3
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