On Thursday 24 October 2002 20:46, Hayden Myers wrote:
> Things have been going well with my progress on integrating traffic
> control in conjunction with DHCP and a web interface for my project. I
> have run into another crutch though. The box needs to limit traffic based
> off of ip but I was just informed that the traffic also has to be limited
> as a whole on a port by port basis. I've begun to think of how to
> implement this and it seems quite complicated to grasp. Even more
> difficult to grasp when I think that all users should have individual per
> port traffic shaping as well. Currently There is an htb root qdisc and a
> class for each user to split bandwidth by user. To split port up by user,
> should I create more classes under the user's class for how I wish to
> further divide that user's traffic?
Yes.
> I plan to add filters attached to the
> qdisc who's parent is the user's class and assign it to the corresponding
> classes designated for by port shaping. To do port shaping on top of this
> as a whole confuses me.
Ad filter to the root qdisc to put the traffic in the different classes based
on the ip-adres. After that, you can add extra filters to the classes so you
can split the traffic further based on ports.
> I picture having a root qdisc which has classes
> to and filters attached to it to first divide the traffic by port. Under
> each of these classes has to be a class for each user to determine their
> share of the allotted port bandwidth. Make sense?
Why splitting first by port? I think it makes more sense to split first by
ip-address and after that by port.
> As far as an interface goes, the initial shaping by port should be setup
> first because this information is needed before users are created.
>
> After the initial shaping by port is done, user creation is possible. The
> user shaped by ip but also needs to be split by port. The port split
> needs to be accomplished by querying all of the parent classes under the
> root qdisc and comparing the filters to determine which ports are split
> and how much bandwidth each port gets. Once this is done the split needs
> to be specified for all of the ports being shaped to subdivide the users
> traffic by port accordingly. This seems like a mouthful and is quite
> complicated. Is this the best way to accomplish such a task?
Euh I can't follow you :)
Do you want the traffic to be splitted by address and then by port or first by
port and then by address or by a combination of port/address? This is
important because it determines how traffic is shared belong the classes.
Stef
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