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Re: Traffic shaping... don't understand the instructions!
- From: "Rodolfo J. Paiz" <rpaiz simpaticus com>
- To: For users of Fedora Core releases <fedora-list redhat com>
- Subject: Re: Traffic shaping... don't understand the instructions!
- Date: Thu, 08 Jul 2004 09:49:49 -0600
At 08:03 PM 7/7/2004, Ow Mun Heng wrote:
Hmm.. I seem to remember there being a discussion on this (or you asking
anyway) and I take it there was no resolution.
My original post dealt with quite a bit of issues and I've progressed quite
well with solving most of them. Now the only real issue left is traffic
shaping.
Then again, since you're using diff interfaces for each link, maybe you
can do this instead. (since we're technically able to only do shaping on
outgoing interfaces.
Yes, I can shape the "outgoing" traffic on each client interface
(eth1-eth4) and in fact it will be the same result as the client having a
max download speed. I can then shape the outgoing traffic on eth0
(Internet) from each customer interface or network (each interface uses a
different subnet) to make the traffic shaping bidirectional. I just don't
get *how* yet. <grin>
what you can do is create classes that routes the traffic to each
interface according to the limits you've set out.
tc qdisc add dev eth0 root handle 1: htb rate 1mbit (eg)
tc qdisc add dev eth1 root handle 1:10 htb rate 128kbit
tc qdics add dev eth2 root handle 1:20 htb rate 256kbit
tc qdics add dev eth3 root handle 1:30 htb rate 128kbit
tc qdics add dev eth4 root handle 1:40 htb rate 320kbit
I know I can run these commands from the command line; but how do I make
them permanent? Also, should I use your commands here as a guide or can I
actually try them? Where can I find more docs (other than the LARTC guide)
to go deeper into this? And is there any specific reason why you use 10,
20, 30, and 40 there? Are those built-in? Or did you just pick them?
(note: I didn't put a Ceil there cause by default the rate=ceil if you
don't specify and since you don't allow borrowing from other classes etc..etc)
For the above scenerio, excess bandwidth will not be shared. (it's like
a Hard Cap)
Great... I'll start testing this and I would appreciate any further
comments you can make. Can I also allow "borrowing" later? I understand
that to mean that people are allowed to use additional bandwidth *if and
only if* no one else is using it; is that correct? How would you set up
borrowing?
Hope that helps.. Please report your findings so that I can incorporate
that into the Howto.
I'll provide lots more feedback when I understand the stuff; for now I
would only suggest lots more explanatory text in the HOWTO and more theory
so people can understand the commands being issued or the parameters being set.
Thanks in advance for any help on this,
--
Rodolfo J. Paiz
rpaiz simpaticus com
http://www.simpaticus.com
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