Hey Bob:

It does devote a chapter to QoS, though I'm not sure
whether it's to the level you'd be looking for. Here
is the exploded TOC for that chapter:

Using Traffic Control to Support QoS
-Introduction
-Basic Structure of Traffic Control in Linux
-Traffic Control in the Outgoing Direction
-Kernel Structures and Interfaces
--Handles
--Queuing Disciplines
--Classes
--Filters
-Ingress Policing
-Implementing a Queuing discipline
--The Token-Bucket Filter
-Configuration
--The RT Netlink Interface
--The User Interface

I can bring the book by the next meeting I attend
(maybe next week - out of town this Thurs).

Jason




--- Bob Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Jason wrote:
> 
> > The Linux Networking Architecture. Wehrle, et. al.
> > Very technical look at networking in the Linux
> kernel.
> > Runs through the basic kernel structure, network
> > devices, TCP/UDP, etc. Should be useful to the
> network
> > coding folk out there.
> 
> Does this book cover the topics in the Advanced
> Linux Routing &
> Traffic Control HOWTO, namely tunnels, IPv6, IPSEC
> configuration,
> multicast routing, the many QoS modules, bonding,
> iptables and modules,
> bridging, and dynamic routing?
> 
>     http://lartc.org/
> 
> I'm still looking for a good guide to QoS on Linux. 
> The lartc is like
> a man page: it lists every fact, but doesn't give
> much guidance as to
> what to do.
> 
> -- 
> Bob Miller                              K<bob>
> kbobsoft software consulting
> http://kbobsoft.com                    
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> _______________________________________________
> EUGLUG mailing list
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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