> On Oct 22, 2018, at 11:32 PM, Toke Høiland-Jørgensen wrote:
>
> ...which means that CAKE is now officially in upstream Linux. Woohoo!
>
> It's even listed at the top of the "Coolest features" list on the
> kernelnewbies overview:
>
> On 23 Oct, 2018, at 5:54 am, Dave Taht wrote:
>
>> The Internet would simply work better
>> if AQM was a standard feature at all bottlenecks.
>
> FQ+AQM. :)
Ideally yes. But AQM by itself would be a start, and theoretically the
hardware out there can mostly do it to some degree already,
Jonathan Morton writes:
>> On 23 Oct, 2018, at 12:32 am, Toke Høiland-Jørgensen wrote:
>>
>> It's even listed at the top of the "Coolest features" list on the
>> kernelnewbies overview:
>>
> On 23 Oct, 2018, at 12:32 am, Toke Høiland-Jørgensen wrote:
>
> It's even listed at the top of the "Coolest features" list on the
> kernelnewbies overview:
> https://kernelnewbies.org/Linux_4.19#Better_networking_experience_with_the_CAKE_queue_management_algorithm
I do hope that's an
On Mon, Oct 22, 2018 at 2:32 PM Toke Høiland-Jørgensen wrote:
>
> ...which means that CAKE is now officially in upstream Linux. Woohoo!
>
> It's even listed at the top of the "Coolest features" list on the
> kernelnewbies overview:
>
...which means that CAKE is now officially in upstream Linux. Woohoo!
It's even listed at the top of the "Coolest features" list on the
kernelnewbies overview:
https://kernelnewbies.org/Linux_4.19#Better_networking_experience_with_the_CAKE_queue_management_algorithm
Congratulations, and thanks,