Hello Kurt,

[snip]

> My problem is the downstream, e.g. a HTTP download. I thought it should
> be possible to lower the incoming datarate by using a smaller TCP
> window, resulting in the remote host waiting for acknowledgement of each
> packet and therefore reducing the datarate. Maybe together with delaying
> the TCP-ACK packets if there are a lot of downloads.
apart from other doubts expressed here on the list this also wont work when
someone is
downloading UDP based traffic...
>
> I did already try the traffic shaper, keeping my upstream bandwidth
> below the line bandwith thus having empty upstream queues all the time.
> But it did not fix the jitter especially on downloads, so I think
> something else must be done as boxes like the AVM Fritz VoIP box is
> quite unaffected when up-/downloading while using VoIP.
are the TOS/DiffServ fields of the incoming stream set to some useful
values?
This may help the ISPs router to give the Voip packets better priority.
Also the jitter-buffer algorithm of the AVM box may just be better. Assuming
that some
priorization is working a 1500 byte packet should cause something around 20
ms additional
delay in worst case - which isnt that bad... You may test the different
buffer algorithms
with tools like http://snad.ncsl.nist.gov/itg/nistnet/ or
http://www.wanulator.de in your lab.

Good luck and best regards,
Michael






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