MikroTik Ookla Speedtest Based Failover (longer testing duration)

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This video helps you to understand how the Ookla Speedtest based Failover works in MikroTik. IP address 192.168.108.1 is an example of an IP address which in this simulation is likened to a Public IP on the internet. Actually the IP address 192.168.108.1 is the gateway IP address used by the host PC to connect to the internet. I don&want to make you wait long for a traceroute to a real domain or public IP, so I decided to make the host&gateway IP address an example of a public IP. The important thing is that the traced IP address is above the GNS3 NAT so it can be likened to a Public IP. Take a look at the second hop in the traceroute. IP 10.10.10.1 is the IP address of the primary ISP router, while IP 10.10.20.1 is the IP address of the secondary ISP router. I have set the script in Netwatch to disable route via 10.10.10.1 for the "main" routing table (excluding the Speedtest Container) if the network is down (the speedtest results are bad) and enable it again if the speedtest is good.

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