-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
pld-linux/shapecfg
Folders and files
Name | Name | Last commit message | Last commit date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Repository files navigation
Traffic Shaper For Linux This is the current ALPHA release of the traffic shaper for Linux. It works within the following limits: o Minimum shaping speed is currently about 9600 baud (it can only shape down to 1 byte per clock tick) o Maximum is about 256K, it will go above this but get a bit blocky. o If you ifconfig the master device that a shaper is attached to down then your machine will follow. o The shaper must be a module. Setup: A shaper device is configured using the shapeconfig program. Typically you will do something like this shapecfg attach shaper0 eth1 shapecfg speed shaper0 64000 ifconfig shaper0 myhost netmask 255.255.255.240 broadcast 1.2.3.4.255 up route add -net some.network netmask a.b.c.d dev shaper0 The shaper should have the same IP address as the device it is attached to for normal use. Gotchas: The shaper shapes transmitted traffic. It's rather impossible to shape received traffic except at the end (or a router) transmitting it. Gated/routed/rwhod/mrouted all see the shaper as an additional device and will treat it as such unless patched. Note that for mrouted you can run mrouted tunnels via a traffic shaper to control bandwidth usage. The shaper is device/route based. This makes it very easy to use with any setup BUT less flexible. You may well want to combine this patch with Mike McLagan 's patch to allow routes to be specified by source/destination pairs. There is no "borrowing" or "sharing" scheme. This is a simple traffic limiter. I'd like to implement Van Jacobson and Sally Floyd's CBQ architecture into Linux one day (maybe in 2.1 sometime) and do this with style.
About
No description, website, or topics provided.
Resources
Stars
Watchers
Forks
Releases
No releases published
Packages 0
No packages published