The issue is the MT don't see the originating traffic, just the ips on the pppoe session, so , not really any good way to see what "device" is acutally pulling it, therefore all we know is xyz ip is pulling. Guess you can turn on PCQ and enabgle on both ip pairs and ports, this would help.. .
Dennis Burgess, CTO, Link Technologies, Inc. [email protected] – 314-735-0270 x103 – www.linktechs.net -----Original Message----- From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Matt Sent: Tuesday, August 4, 2015 2:16 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [AFMUG] QOS on Mikrotik with PPPoE > You would have to have a MT CPE, or something doing the NAT on the inside of > the network. It has to see all of the private IPs, then PCQ works quite > well. Not sure what you mean by Mikrotik CPE. They have a Canopy SM providing access and the Mikrotik acts as wifi router/NAT and does PPPoE to our PPPoE server for them. The Mikrotik sees all there network and does PPPoE to us. > Have a customer that keeps complaining there connection is slow. When they > call in there is always something or another maxing it out. > We bump them to next available plan in there area and it maxes that out too. > They have a Mikrotik doing PPPoE to our access server. > I am thinking they have someone that maxes things out and then it > just slows down for everyone. Is there an easy way with Mikrotik to > force all connections inside to share the bandwidth more equally? Hopefully > something that is pretty much automatic so when they change there rate plan > on the PPPoE it will follow?
