Summary

Public speed tests are not designed to saturate 25–100 Gbps ports. Results are limited by the test server’s capacity, not your port. For high-capacity circuits, public endpoints typically top out around 1–10 Gbps, sometimes ~25 Gbps, and they are shared with other users—so you’ll see an artificially low ceiling even if your FDC port is perfectly fine.

What’s going on?

  • Public iPerf3 servers are small/shared. Most listed public iPerf3 endpoints advertise 1–10 Gbps (occasionally 10 Gbps+), and they are shared resources, so someone else’s test can bottleneck yours.
  • Speedtest-style platforms vary by operator. Operators host their own servers with widely varying capacity; there is no guarantee a nearby server can drive multi-10G or 100G single-client tests. Academic analysis confirms server deployments and paths can bottleneck results.

Practical implication

If you run a public speed test against a 25/40/100 Gbps server port, you’re nearly always measuring the public endpoint’s ceiling, not the service you purchased.

How to test correctly

  • Use a private iPerf3 peer under your control (or one FDC provides) with equal/greater capacity and a high-speed NIC on both ends.
  • Use multiple parallel streams and adequate test duration (see Article 3).
  • Keep tests on-net / intra-DC when possible to avoid third-party bottlenecks.

References

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