Koozali.org: home of the SME Server
Legacy Forums => Experienced User Forum => Topic started by: jesus on August 08, 2001, 08:17:00 AM
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Can I use the traffic shaper in the e-smith server?
Sorry my english, is poor
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I've got a half-finished RPM sitting on my computer that should take care of traffic shaping in an admin web-page.
In short, yes, you can use traffic shaping, but you also have to modify the /etc/init.d/masq templates to assign traffic types their categories.
What were you looking for in particular?
Regards
Craig Foster
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how can i limit the bandwidth; this is, for example, assing to 192.168.1.11/255.255.255.0 --> 64 kbps, 192.168.0.12/255.255.255.0 --> 128 kbps and others ip's.
This is Because I have an wireless lan, and I have seen this link: http://linux-br.conectiva.com.br/arquivo/2001/05/msg04104.html and i wonder if is this possible in the Smith Server.
Tanks
Jesus
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Do you say your name like "Jeez-us" or like "Hey-Zoos"?
Just wondering.
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The deal is:-
The I've got an e-smith management module, but I'm stuck deciding between too flexible or easy to use :-) I've think this is the easiest layout though
Choose the closest inbound links speed (in kps) [56, 128, 256,512,1000,1500, 2000]
Note: DNS and ICMP will only ever be given a maximum of 5% of the total inbound bandwidth. This should help stop the majority of ping-flood style DoS attacks.
Bandwidth Allocation (in %)
HTTP and HTTPS [10,20,30,40,50,60,70,80] [Hard Limit, Soft Limit]
Mail (POP & SMTP) [10,20,30,40,50,60,70,80] [Hard Limit, Soft Limit]
FTP File Transfers [10,20,30,40,50,60,70,80] [Hard Limit, Soft Limit]
SSH Administration [10,20,30,40,50,60,70,80] [Hard Limit, Soft Limit]
Game Servers [10,20,30,40,50,60,70,80] [Hard Limit, Soft Limit]
NAT Communications [10,20,30,40,50,60,70,80] [Hard Limit, Soft Limit]
(masqueraded connections above port 1024)
The page then calculates the Hard and Soft Bandwidth limits to give you an idea of how much traffic each should do. I've got a friend working on a horizontal compound bar graph showing these limits.
The main problems are:-
Other networks (eg 192.168.1.*)
Other inbound traffic speeds
Time
Flexibility further down the track such as other protocols or server daemons
Other e-smith official and contrib ipmasq RPMs toes
Time
Coding for good perl
Time
Regards,
Craig Foster
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Sounds good, when, where & how ?