Laughable. A non-existant problem perpetuated by people with cheap routers and bad ISPs. None of the "experiments" on that site gave me any trouble and nor would they give anyone trouble if they have a properly set up network, a decent ISP and a decent router. Even the Wikipedia entry for this nonsense is full of "citation needed" markups - because it's a load of rubbish.
For info, my setup:
ISP: Virgin Media, 60Mbit/3Mbit
Modem: Netgear VMNG480 in "modem only" mode
Router: ASUS RT-N56U with firmware 3.0.0.4.334, hardware NAT enabled
Switch: Netgear GS108E gigabit switch
PC: Win 7, NVidia nForce gigabit ethernet controller
Pingtest.net reveals 15ms or less average over 50 miles, with 2-3ms jitter.
Downstream max. out at around 62Mbps (7.7MB/s), upstream at 3Mbps (375KB/s)
Similar results to any fast enough server - I can ping all day long and not see this so-called "bufferbloat".
Any bad latency is down to overloaded servers, servers on slow connections, physical distance, or ISP faults ("faults" include deliberate shaping in this case).
If you are having latency issues in games or have trouble streaming a youtube video, you can be assured the problem is not the mythical "bufferbloat". Either your kit, or your ISP, or the server you use, or all of the above, are shoddy or broken - or you are just too far from the server for it to be possible to have a low-latency and stable connection. Physical distance is a barrier you won't defeat with current consumer technology.
maybe you don´t have Bufferbloat.
But how can you say it doesn´t exist?
Can you please make this test? (Java needed)
http://netalyzr.icsi.berkeley.edu/ and tell me the results?
If they say on that test you have Buffebloat on your upload. Is it wrong?
If it doesn´t exist why is something to fight Buffebloat implemented in Linux Kernel 3.3 and above?
and if you read things like that
http://blog.thelifeofkenneth.com/20...he+Life+of+Kenneth)&utm_content=Google+Reader
They are all wrong?
ISP: Kabel BW , 50Mbit/2,5Mbit (Cable Provider) very good ping times all over the world. With this setup I get an Bufferbloat of 809 ms !
So I upgraded to:
ISP: Kabel BW, 100 Mbit/5Mbit (more is not possible at the moment).
The Bufferbloat decreases to 400 ms on uplink. Maybe it´s not my Router or my Modem it can be something on my Provider. But to say this Problem doesn´t exist will not help.
Please do the test and show the results. And thenn tell me if the test is a lie.