Another idea:

by default shape everything, but allow it to burst a bit (if that's not a problem).

make MARK X not shaped.

MARK X some big networks which will always be Switserland.

Then make a script (using the perl module I metioned previously) to check whether a 
new connection should be shaped or not, if it should not be shaped, and if it's not 
part of the marked IP's already, you add an entry to the MARK X list the /24 network 
where the IP address is in. (I think you can safely say that a /24 network is in one 
country).

After one of these "temporary" marks is inactive for a while, remove it from the MARK 
X list, increase the "time to stay" for networks which are used often.

So, your server apps should trigger a script (in the background) upon every new 
connection (maybe some tcpwrappers can do that, maybe you have to modify a tcpwrapper).

make sure to update the database used by the scripts, Geo::IP has a "premium database 
subscription" update thingy.

Good luck, you can mail me if you need some help,
Jeroen.




On Wed, 31 Mar 2004 00:56:52 +0200
Rene Gallati <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Hello List,
> 
> I have a little non-standard problem (or so I guess). I'm getting a 
> sponsored server on a backbone for almost nothing - which is quite nice. 
> However there is a string attached: Since the bandwith to foreign 
> countries is expensive, while in-land bandwith is almost free, I need to 
> shape down access to all "foreign" IPs.
> 
> Now I have a (large) list of routes/prefixes for destinations which are 
> ok - a whitelist if you want. The question I have now is, how do I best 
> proceed in using that list so that the kernel does not spend too much 
> time looking it up for every single packet.
> 
> Is the routing table hashed by default so access is fast and I can just 
> pump in the ~100KBytes of ip prefixes ? Or does it traverse them 
> linearly and I need to build a hierarchical structure so that it will be 
> fast ? (sort of like in section 12.4 of the LARTC howto with the filters?)
> 
> I've also toyed with the idea of doing it in netfilter since I know 
> netfilter quite a lot better than tc and ip but it is mostly outgoing 
> traffic that is a problem and I sort of feel that this is better done by 
> the routing/filtering infrastructure than by the firewall.
> 
> Any advice?
> 
> Thanks in advance
> 
> _______________________________________________
> LARTC mailing list / [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> http://mailman.ds9a.nl/mailman/listinfo/lartc HOWTO: http://lartc.org/
> 
_______________________________________________
LARTC mailing list / [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://mailman.ds9a.nl/mailman/listinfo/lartc HOWTO: http://lartc.org/

Reply via email to