I'm using the library called psutil to get system/network stats, but I can only get the total uploaded/downloaded bytes on my script.
What would be the way to natively get the network speed using Python?
If you need to know the transfer rate immediately, you should create a thread that does the calculations continuously. I'm not an expert on the subject, but I tried writing a simple program that does what you need:
import threading
import time
from collections import deque
import psutil
def calc_ul_dl(rate, dt=3, interface="WiFi"):
t0 = time.time()
counter = psutil.net_io_counters(pernic=True)[interface]
tot = (counter.bytes_sent, counter.bytes_recv)
while True:
last_tot = tot
time.sleep(dt)
counter = psutil.net_io_counters(pernic=True)[interface]
t1 = time.time()
tot = (counter.bytes_sent, counter.bytes_recv)
ul, dl = [
(now - last) / (t1 - t0) / 1000.0
for now, last in zip(tot, last_tot)
]
rate.append((ul, dl))
t0 = time.time()
def print_rate(rate):
try:
print("UL: {0:.0f} kB/s / DL: {1:.0f} kB/s".format(*rate[-1]))
except IndexError:
"UL: - kB/s/ DL: - kB/s"
# Create the ul/dl thread and a deque of length 1 to hold the ul/dl- values
transfer_rate = deque(maxlen=1)
t = threading.Thread(target=calc_ul_dl, args=(transfer_rate,))
# The program will exit if there are only daemonic threads left.
t.daemon = True
t.start()
# The rest of your program, emulated by me using a while True loop
while True:
print_rate(transfer_rate)
time.sleep(5)
Here you should set the dt
argument to whatever seams reasonable for you. I tried using 3 seconds, and this is my output while runnning an online speedtest:
UL: 2 kB/s / DL: 8 kB/s
UL: 3 kB/s / DL: 45 kB/s
UL: 24 kB/s / DL: 1306 kB/s
UL: 79 kB/s / DL: 4 kB/s
UL: 121 kB/s / DL: 3 kB/s
UL: 116 kB/s / DL: 4 kB/s
UL: 0 kB/s / DL: 0 kB/s
The values seems reasonable since my result from the speedtest were DL: 1258 kB/s
and UL: 111 kB/s
.
The answer provided by Steinar Lima is correct. But it can be done without threading also:
import time
import psutil
import os
count = 0
qry = ""
ul = 0.00
dl = 0.00
t0 = time.time()
upload = psutil.net_io_counters(pernic=True)["Wireless Network Connection"][0]
download = psutil.net_io_counters(pernic=True)["Wireless Network Connection"][1]
up_down = (upload, download)
while True:
last_up_down = up_down
upload = psutil.net_io_counters(pernic=True)["Wireless Network Connection"][0]
download = psutil.net_io_counters(pernic=True)["Wireless Network Connection"][1]
t1 = time.time()
up_down = (upload, download)
try:
ul, dl = [
(now - last) / (t1 - t0) / 1024.0
for now, last in zip(up_down, last_up_down)
]
t0 = time.time()
except:
pass
if dl > 0.1 or ul >= 0.1:
time.sleep(0.75)
os.system("cls")
print("UL: {:0.2f} kB/s \n".format(ul) + "DL: {:0.2f} kB/s".format(dl))
v = input()
Simple and easy ;)
I added an LCD mod for this code if you want to test it on a raspberry pi but you need to add the psutil
and the lcddriver
to your project code!!!!
import time
import psutil
import os
import lcddriver
count=0
qry=''
ul=0.00
dl=0.00
t0 = time.time()
upload=psutil.net_io_counters(pernic=True)['wlan0'][0]
download=psutil.net_io_counters(pernic=True)['wlan0'][1]
up_down=(upload,download)
display = lcddriver.lcd()
while True:
last_up_down = up_down
upload=psutil.net_io_counters(pernic=True)['wlan0'][0]
download=psutil.net_io_counters(pernic=True)['wlan0'][1]
t1 = time.time()
up_down = (upload,download)
try:
ul, dl = [(now - last) / (t1 - t0) / 1024.0
for now,last in zip(up_down, last_up_down)]
t0 = time.time()
#display.lcd_display_string(str(datetime.datetime.now().time()), 1)
except:
pass
if dl>0.1 or ul>=0.1:
time.sleep(0.75)
os.system('cls')
print('UL: {:0.2f} kB/s \n'.format(ul)+'DL:{:0.2f} kB/s'.format(dl))
display.lcd_display_string(str('DL:{:0.2f} KB/s '.format(dl)), 1)
display.lcd_display_string(str('UL:{:0.2f} KB/s '.format(ul)), 2)
# if KeyboardInterrupt: # If there is a KeyboardInterrupt (when you press ctrl+c), exit the program and cleanup
# print("Cleaning up!")
# display.lcd_clear()
v=input()
The (effective) network speed is simply bytes transferred in a given time interval, divided by the length of the interval. Obviously there are different ways to aggregate / average the times and they give you different "measures" ... but it all basically boils down to division.
Another and more simple solution (without threading and queues although still based on @Steinar Lima) and for more recent python:
import time
import psutil
def on_calculate_speed(self, interface):
dt = 1 # I find that dt = 1 is good enough
t0 = time.time()
try:
counter = psutil.net_io_counters(pernic=True)[interface]
except KeyError:
return []
tot = (counter.bytes_sent, counter.bytes_recv)
while True:
last_tot = tot
time.sleep(dt)
try:
counter = psutil.net_io_counters(pernic=True)[interface]
except KeyError:
break
t1 = time.time()
tot = (counter.bytes_sent, counter.bytes_recv)
ul, dl = [
(now - last) / (t1 - t0) / 1000.0
for now, last
in zip(tot, last_tot)
]
return [int(ul), int(dl)]
t0 = time.time()
while SomeCondition:
# "wlp2s0" is usually the default wifi interface for linux, but you
# could use any other interface that you want/have.
interface = "wlp2s0"
result_speed = on_calculate_speed(interface)
if len(result_speed) < 1:
print("Upload: - kB/s/ Download: - kB/s")
else:
ul, dl = result_speed[0], result_speed[1]
print("Upload: {} kB/s / Download: {} kB/s".format(ul, dl))
Or you could also fetch the default interface with pyroute2:
while SomeCondition:
ip = IPDB()
interface = ip.interfaces[ip.routes['default']['oif']]["ifname"]
result_speed = on_calculate_speed(interface)
if len(result_speed) < 1:
print("Upload: - kB/s/ Download: - kB/s")
else:
ul, dl = result_speed[0], result_speed[1]
print("Upload: {} kB/s / Download: {} kB/s".format(ul, dl))
ip.release()
i found this tread, and dont have any idea from python, i jst copy and paste codes, and now need a little help, this script, i have jst show the total of bytes send/recived, can modify to show the actual speed?
def network(iface):
stat = psutil.net_io_counters(pernic=True)[iface]
return "%s: Tx%s, Rx%s" % \
(iface, bytes2human(stat.bytes_sent), bytes2human(stat.bytes_recv))
def stats(device):
# use custom font
font_path = str(Path(__file__).resolve().parent.joinpath('fonts', 'C&C Red Alert [INET].ttf'))
font_path2 = str(Path(__file__).resolve().parent.joinpath('fonts', 'Stockholm.ttf'))
font2 = ImageFont.truetype(font_path, 12)
font3 = ImageFont.truetype(font_path2, 11)
with canvas(device) as draw:
draw.text((0, 0), cpu_usage(), font=font2, fill="white")
if device.height >= 32:
draw.text((0, 14), mem_usage(), font=font2, fill="white")
if device.height >= 64:
draw.text((0, 26), "IP: " + getIP("eth0"), font=font2, fill=255)
try:
draw.text((0, 38), network('eth0'), font=font2, fill="white")
except KeyError:
# no wifi enabled/available
pass
# pip install speedtest-cli
import speedtest
speed_test = speedtest.Speedtest()
def bytes_to_mb(bytes):
KB = 1024 # One Kilobyte is 1024 bytes
MB = KB * 1024 # One MB is 1024 KB
return int(bytes/MB)
download_speed = bytes_to_mb(speed_test.download())
print("Your Download speed is", download_speed, "MB")
upload_speed = bytes_to_mb(speed_test.upload())
print("Your Upload speed is", upload_speed, "MB")
The first answer in interface should be change to desired network adapter. To see the name in ubuntu you can use ifconfig, then change interface='wifi'
to the device name.
a little change to formatting in python3
def print_rate(rate):
try:
print(('UL: {0:.0f} kB/s / DL: {1:.0f} kB/s').format(*rate[-1]))
except IndexError:
'UL: - kB/s/ DL: - kB/s'