Peter Surda wrote:
On Sun, 22 May 2005 18:51:36 +0100 Andy Furniss <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
You could aswell as wrr consider esfq - you can only roughly divide what
bandwidth you have, but the advantage over wrr is that you can choose a
queue length for your link speed.
ESFQ is good, but isn't a panacea. You still can use esfq as a queueing
discipline for wrr's subclasses. In fact it's a perfect match, because you have
both fair division among sources AND among the connections made from the same
IP.
I agree wrr is better than esfq in many ways. I also haven't used it or
looked at it for some time, so may be totally wrong about what you can
and can't do with it :-)
I don't think you can di it with wrr and if you are shaping download
from the internet it could be better.
You don't have to do this directly with WRR, but you can do it with HTB "above"
WRR. As for download, you can use IMQ.
What I meant was I don't think you can choose one length for the whole
wrr class - you can add queues to wrr like you can htb classes and you
can limit those, but you have one for each user - so with many users and
shaping from the wrong end of a slow link you end up with a total queue
length that is too long to keep good control of the link.
The above may not be such an issue depending on the speed of the link
and the number of users active at any one time.
Andy.
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