Michael Vogel wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb:

I suggest you take a look at http://lartc.org/


I already found a mailinglist called this name when "googleing" for help. But I haven't found that page until now.

There you can find all the info on creating a box for shaping traffic.


Great.

Currently, I configured a P200Pro w/ 128 MB of RAM + 2NICs as a bridge + QoS + ntop. We run Citrix (highly interactive) traffic, Video, and soon to add VoIP to the mix. The P200 works great for this. I start up the bridge as a service, which bridges the NICs, sets an IP for the bridge (so I can SSH to it and hit ntop from a browser), and then runs 2 scripts, one for shaping each interface. You don't need the newest kernel. 2.4 or later has tc. You'll also want bridge-utils for this kind of use.


I am stuck to 2.6. I don't want to run a second machine. I want to reuse the server I already use for mail (smtp, imap), news, webmail, packet radio station, internet node (for packet radio) and proxy. Due to some technical reasons (I use an experimental kernelpatch) I can only use 2.6. But I already made the "tc" command work. (at first it made some trouble since Debian Woody isn't really made for kernel 2.6)

I suggest you read up on CBQ and HTB and SFQ queueing disciplines. These should help you the most. The LARTC mailing list is also quite helpful.


I will take a look.

Thanks!

Michael

Micheal,

Probably the easiest way to prioritize * traffic is to use Wondershaper and set tos=lowdelay in sip.conf and iax.conf. This combo will make sure that * traffic gets the highest priority.


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