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Sincerely Jonathan Ryshpan <jon...@pacbell.net> For I am a Bear of Very Little Brain, and long words bother me. -- Winnie the Pooh
Sincerely Jonathan Ryshpan <jon...@pacbell.net> All the world's a stage and most of us are desperately unrehearsed. -- Sean O'Casey
Your page loads fast for me, around 400-500 ms. The slowness from inside your home network may be related to NAT loopback. Turn off wifi on your phone and see how your page loads.
On Monday, December 13, 2021 at 11:02:07 PM UTC-8 jonatha...@gmail.com wrote:
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I have a weather station that's visible on the web as http://oaklandweather.ddns.net/weewx/index.html . Response from a web browser is very slow, about 25 seconds to refresh.It's also visible on my local network as http://oaklandweather/weewx/index.html . Response from a web browser is very fast, less than 250 ms to refresh.
On Monday, December 13, 2021 at 11:02:07 PM UTC-8 jonatha...@gmail.com wrote:
I have a weather station that's visible on the web as http://oaklandweather.ddns.net/weewx/index.html . Response from a web browser is very slow, about 25 seconds to refresh.It's also visible on my local network as http://oaklandweather/weewx/index.html . Response from a web browser is very fast, less than 250 ms to refresh.
From inside your LAN:
- Try it by ip address: http://45.30.89.101/weewx/index.html and see if it's still slow
- Alternately try http://45-30-89-101.lightspeed.sntcca.sbcglobal.net/weewx/index.html
Here's what I checked - you might see if you get the same answer from 'inside' your LAN...$ host 45.30.89.101
101.89.30.45.in-addr.arpa domain name pointer 45-30-89-101.lightspeed.sntcca.sbcglobal.net.$ host 45-30-89-101.lightspeed.sntcca.sbcglobal.net
45-30-89-101.lightspeed.sntcca.sbcglobal.net has address 45.30.89.101If it's still bad in all the ways above, you'd have to explain how you punched Internet through back to your webserver on your LAN.

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Sincerely Jonathan Ryshpan <jon...@pacbell.net> And God fulfills himself in many ways Lest one good custom should corrupt the world. -- Tennyson
May be you want to try tcptraceroute to track the way of the packets through your network.tcptraceroute -p 80 oaklandweather.ddns.nettcptraceroute -p 80 45-30-89-101.lightspeed.sntcca.sbcglobal.net(tcptraceroute is not installed by default, so may be, you have to install it before.)And may be, there is an internal IP address of your weather server that plays a role in that. It may start with 192.168....
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Sincerely Jonathan Ryshpan <jon...@pacbell.net> As our case is new, so we must think anew and act anew. -- Lincoln
I don't think tcp/8245 inbound should be open. The no-ip updates are outbound so you do not need to open a port in. Change your port 80 forward to tcp only, udp 80 is not needed.AndyOn Wednesday, December 15, 2021 at 3:47:32 AM UTC-8 kk44...@gmail.com wrote:May be you want to try tcptraceroute to track the way of the packets through your network.tcptraceroute -p 80 oaklandweather.ddns.nettcptraceroute -p 80 45-30-89-101.lightspeed.sntcca.sbcglobal.net(tcptraceroute is not installed by default, so may be, you have to install it before.)And may be, there is an internal IP address of your weather server that plays a role in that. It may start with 192.168....
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Sincerely Jonathan Ryshpan <jon...@pacbell.net> Dance, as if nobody's watching, Love, as if you've never been hurt, Sing, as if no one can hear you, Work, as if you don't need the money, Live, as if heaven is on earth. -- Rumi