We have About 600 customers.  Varrying speeds, from 386/386 to
1meg/1meg.  We have 100base network cards straight to the switch, then
we have about 8 megabit burst to 12.

Scott

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Leroy Koglin Jr.
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2003 5:37 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [smartBridges] Caching anyone?


How many/much clients/throughput?



-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Scott Damron
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2003 11:26 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [smartBridges] Caching anyone?

I am using Mikrotik for cacheing and firewall, and QOS!!!  All in one.
Running it on a PIII667 with 256 megs of ram and it runs about 3-12%
utilization.

Scott

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Eje Gustafsson
Sent: Sunday, September 07, 2003 11:05 AM
To: Bobby Bounds
Subject: Re: [smartBridges] Caching anyone?


BB> Hi y'all . . . . . I've got a few quick questions:

BB> 1. What percent of WISP's are doing web caching? What products are
BB> you using for this? Is it a good thing? Pros/Cons?

Depending on your customer base. The more customers you have the better
a caching is working. But if you don't have a lot then it gets close to
pointless because you will not have enough cached to really make a
difference. For example a while back I did some tests. 100 dialup lines.
Running webproxy on them for a week. In that week I saved 5Gigs of
bandwidth.

Since this was a redirect in router each time the webproxy was having
issues the customers could not surf. So after it caused problems a
couple of times in about a months period I pulled it because the chance
of going down for a hour or two to save 5Gig of traffic wasn't worth the
hassle.

However say your having 100-150 highspeed customers and you close to
maxing out a T1 you might with help of web-proxy be able to easily add
another 20-50 users on that T1 before you need to get a second T1.

BB> 2. Is anyone firewalling their customers? If so, what products are
BB> used? Is it a good thing for a WISP to be firewalling their 
BB> customers connection or should they be providing an 'unaltered' 
BB> internet connection (e.g. the recent Blaster worm.....should the 
BB> WISP be blocking those ports)?

I pretty much run straight pipes to my customers. Firewalling is up to
them. However I do have some firewalling blocks that prevent some of the
newer worms from spreading FROM my clients and some rules preventing
worms from getting TO my clients. But mainly FROM. Since we also don't
allow servers I have no qualms in blocking inbound port 80 and 135-139
to my clients so far not had a single complain about that (but then also
we don't allow servers so the only ones that would complain are the ones
that try to run servers so a catch 22 for them).

BB> 3. A system like Mikrotik does the QOS/Bandwidth Mgmt. and
BB> authentication, but does it also do 1. and 2. ? Does a guy need 
BB> separate boxes for these functions?

Absolutely a correctly installed and setup MT unit in the right spot of
your network can do all of these things for you. I can do all of the
above on my Core MT router right now the only thing I don't do on it is
web-proxy but all I need to do is basically flip (enable) a firewall
rule and the web-proxy is running. BTW web-proxy is a great way to kill
of and prevent none html programs using port 80 such as Kazaa and other
filesharing applications. Because they can not function on port 80
through a webproxy.

BB> Thanks,

Best regards,
 Eje Gustafsson                       mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
The Family Entertainment Network      http://www.fament.com
Phone : 620-231-7777                  Fax   : 620-231-4066
     - Your Full Time Professionals -
--

BB> Bobby Bounds
BB> Airwave Internet, LLC

-- 
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