A lot will have to do with what algorithm you use for dealing with the traffic.

There are still many uses for the classic PRIO and CBQ (listed at lartc.org as 
mentioned below, more specifically: 
http://lartc.org/howto/lartc.qdisc.classful.html)

Though I quite like the HTB (Hierarchical Token Bucket) for shared hosting 
environments.  It's also mentioned at lartc, but there are more details at:

http://luxik.cdi.cz/~devik/qos/htb/manual/userg.htm


-Steve

On May 3, 2013, at 8:48 AM, Byron Clark wrote:

> On Fri, May 3, 2013 at 1:37 AM, Dan Egli <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> *I was reading the tc man page, and I have to say I've rarely seen a less
>> informative man page. It gives absolutely no examples at all, so you don't
>> know how to setup each type of QDISC. Does anyone know of any good examples
>> of tc? I'm specifically trying to setup a simple priority basis, were any
>> traffic on ports X, Y, or Z can go at the full data rate the network
>> interface can handle, but anything on ports A, B, or C is limited, say to
>> 10 mbits.*
>> 
>> 
> LARTC is a good place to start: http://www.lartc.org/
> 
> After that, this article really helped me understand how to build what I
> needed:
> http://wiki.linuxwall.info/doku.php/en:ressources:dossiers:networking:traffic_control
> 
> --
> Byron Clark

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