> The issue is the MT don't see the originating traffic, just the ips on the > pppoe session, so , not really any good way to see what > "device" is acutally pulling it, therefore all we know is xyz ip is pulling. > Guess you can turn on PCQ and enabgle on both ip pairs > and ports, this would help.. .
There Mikrotik will see it. Basically we took out there Linksys router and replaced it with a Mikrotik RB951Ui-2HnD and it does a client PPPoE connection to our PPPoE server. It also does NAT, DHCP, Wifi and everything else for there network. >> You would have to have a MT CPE, or something doing the NAT on the inside of >> the network. It has to see all of the private IPs, then PCQ works quite >> well. > > Not sure what you mean by Mikrotik CPE. They have a Canopy SM providing > access and the Mikrotik acts as wifi router/NAT and does PPPoE to our PPPoE > server for them. The Mikrotik sees all there network and does PPPoE to us. > >> Have a customer that keeps complaining there connection is slow. When they >> call in there is always something or another maxing it out. >> We bump them to next available plan in there area and it maxes that out >> too. They have a Mikrotik doing PPPoE to our access server. >> I am thinking they have someone that maxes things out and then it >> just slows down for everyone. Is there an easy way with Mikrotik to >> force all connections inside to share the bandwidth more equally? Hopefully >> something that is pretty much automatic so when they change there rate plan >> on the PPPoE it will follow?