215

Is there a way I can simulate various connection speeds from within Chrome?

I need to be able to check http://localhost with varying speeds.

I know there are standalone applications that can do this, but I'd rather do this inside Chrome.

2
  • An extension definitely doesn't have that level of access. Chrome only provides extension APIs for the most common tasks and this isn't one of them. Apr 26, 2012 at 8:06
  • Checkout webpagetest.org. You can set connection speed under test settings / connection. Mar 4, 2013 at 23:18

12 Answers 12

148

If you are running Linux, the following command is really useful for this:

trickle -s -d 50 -w 100 firefox

The -s tells the command to run standalone, the -d 50 tells it to limit bandwidth to 50 KB/s, the -w 100 set the peak detection window size to 100 KB. firefox tells the command to start firefox with all of this rate limiting applied to any sites it attempts to load.

Update

Chrome 38 is out now and includes throttling. To find it, bring up the Developer Tools: Ctrl+Shift+I does it on my machine, otherwise Menu->More Tools->Developer Tools will bring you there.

Then Toggle Device Mode by clicking the phone in the upper left of the Developer Tools Panel (see the tooltip below).

Toggle device mode

Then activate throttling like so.

Activate Chrome throttling

If you find this a bit clunky, my suggestion above works for both Chrome and Firefox.

2
  • I tried the dev feature in Chrome and uploaded a YouTube video. It didn't seem to throttle the upload at all.
    – WHol
    Sep 22, 2015 at 11:43
  • 1
    The throttle feature isn't an upload limiter. It's for download testing and seeing how your page loads on a different connection.
    – Nelson
    Sep 24, 2016 at 11:18
120

I'd recommend Charles Proxy - you can choose to slowdown individual sites, also has a whole bunch of HTTP inspection tools.

Edit:

As of June 2014, Chrome now has the ability to do this natively in DevTools - you'll need Chrome 38 though.

The option is accessible from the Network tab via a drop down at the end of the toolbar.

12
  • 70
    A warning: Charles is not free
    – Charlie
    Oct 23, 2013 at 16:35
  • 8
    Where do you find this in chrome devtools?
    – Paul
    Jul 18, 2014 at 15:22
  • 15
    Fire up DevTools in Canary, the along the top you have the search icon, phone icon, Elements, Network etc. Click the phone icon and then choose Emulation in the bottom panel, network emulation options are in that panel Jul 18, 2014 at 21:33
  • 1
    @Andy ughh... How did you get the phone icon to appear? They keep moving things around in Canary...
    – Nathan
    Jul 30, 2014 at 22:30
  • 36
    Unfortunately the throttling in Chrome only works with downloads, not uploads. Oct 18, 2014 at 23:43
71

Starting with Chrome 38 you can do this without any plugins. Just click inspect element (or F12 hotkey), then click on toggle device mod (the phone button)

enter image description here

and you will see something like this:

enter image description here

Among many other features it allows you to simulate specific internet connection (3G, GPRS)

2
  • 15
    This appears to work nicely for page load testing, however testing upload (using xmlhttpreq2) did not appear to be limited. - offline and no throttling worked, but during upload the process appears to ignore the GPRS etc limits - it would be nice if upload could also be shaped so we can test progress bars, timeouts etc.
    – Josh Mc
    Dec 22, 2014 at 7:03
  • 2
    This is correct, it is an outstanding issue code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=414319
    – clns
    Apr 1, 2015 at 17:43
66

As of today you can throttle your connection natively in Google Chrome Canary 46.0.2489.0. Simply open up Dev Tools and head over to the Network tab:

enter image description here

4
  • 1
    This is the easiest route, and requires no extra plugins.
    – earl3s
    Oct 20, 2016 at 19:16
  • 2
    But it doesn't have an effect on websockets. Mar 27, 2017 at 15:36
  • 1
    I have only Slow 3G and Fast 3G. How can I add the others? Apr 4, 2021 at 8:32
  • With e.g. "Slow 3G", the page is fully white until all images are loaded. On a regular page load with slow network, rendering already starts before all images are loaded. So this does not seem to be an accurate simulation.
    – donquixote
    Nov 28, 2021 at 17:37
19

As Michael said, the Chrome extension API doesn't offer a reliable way of doing this. On the other hand: there's a software I've been using myself for quite some time.

Try Sloppy, a Java application that simulates low bandwidth. It's browser independent, it's very easy to use and, best of all, it's free!

13

If you are on a Mac, the Chrome dev team recommend the 'Network Link Conditioner Tool'

Either:

Xcode > Open Developer Tool > More Developer Tools > Hardware IO Tools for Xcode

Or if you don't want to install Xcode:

Go to the Apple Download Center and search for Hardware IO Tools

https://developer.apple.com/downloads/index.action

1
  • To search for Hardware IO Tools on Apple's site as of March 2016, go to this link. The "Network Link Conditioner" Preference Pane allows you to set the downlink & uplink bandwidth, % of packets dropped and delay. Mar 19, 2016 at 18:55
13

Original article: https://helpdeskgeek.com/networking/simulate-slow-internet-connection-testing/

Simulate Slow Connection using Chrome Go ahead and install Chrome if you don’t already have it installed on your system. Once you do, open a new tab and then press CTRL + SHIFT + I to open the developer tools window or click on the hamburger icon, then More tools and then Developer tools.

enter image description here

This will bring up the Developer Tools window, which will probably be docked on the right side of the screen. I prefer it docked at the bottom of the screen since you can see more data. To do this, click on the three vertical dots and then click on the middle dock position.

enter image description here

Now go ahead and click on the Network tab. On the right, you should see a label called No Throttling.

enter image description here

If you click on that, you’ll get a dropdown list of a pre-configured speed that you can use to simulate a slow connection.

enter image description here

The choices range from Offline to WiFi and the numbers are shown as Latency, Download, Upload. The slowest is GPRS followed by Regular 2G, then Good 2G, then Regular 3G, Good 3G, Regular 4G, DSL and then WiFi. Pick one of the options and then reload the page you are on or type in another URL in the address bar. Just make sure you are in the same tab where the developer tools are being displayed. The throttling only works for the tab you have it enabled for.

If you want to use your own specific values, you can click the Add button under Custom. Click on the Add Custom Profile button to add a new profile.

enter image description here

When using GPRS, it took www.google.com a whopping 16 seconds to load! Overall, this is a great tool that is built right into Chrome that you can use for testing your website load time on slower connections. If you have any questions, feel free to comment. Enjoy!

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  • 1
    Good answer, Arbaz!
    – Matt
    Jul 24, 2018 at 11:24
  • 2
    Detailed and thorough! Thanks! May 24, 2019 at 19:40
11

In Chrome Canary now you can limit the network throughput. This can be done in the "Network" options of the "Emulation" tab of the Console in the Dev Tools.

You might need to activate the Chrome flag "Enable Developer Tools experiments" (chrome://flags/#enable-devtools-experiments) (chrome://flags) to see this new feature. You can simulate some low bandwidth (GSM, GPRS, EDGE, 3G) for mobile connections.

2
  • This is so easy to use, and also works on localhost without any additional setup. Excellent suggestion. Jul 22, 2014 at 10:56
  • 2
    Can't get this working, I've enabled the flag but no network option shows in emulation under dev tools, is this windows only?
    – Pez Cuckow
    Jul 24, 2014 at 11:34
4

if you're not familiar with Fiddler - please do. It's a great debugging tool for HTTP. You also have the option to limit the bandwidth.

1
1

I don't think what you ask can be done by chrome alone. The closest I could find was this, which isn't what you want. I getting a chrome plugin to do it would be Hard.

A web proxy running on your local machine could achieve the effect you want. A search for "throttling proxy" came up with this, for example.

1

As suggested on the Chrome Mobile Emulation page, you can use Clumsy on Windows, Network Link Conditioner on Mac OS X and dummynet on Linux.

1

If you are using OSX, you can use: Network Link Conditioner

enter image description here

Here you can select different profiles ie. 100% Loss, 3G, DSL etc.

Please find the below link to download Network Link Conditioner here

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