I don't think Nistnet is the right tool for the job. It is mainly for generating delay, packet loss and simulating finite buffers. If you want multi-level bandwidth shaping it would be better to use the "tc qdisc" commands - see http://lartc.org/
Jonathon ________________________________ From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Hirschmiller, Rainer, MSOP22 Sent: Friday, 30 May 2008 01:16 To: nistnet@antd.nist.gov Subject: [nistnet] Definition of Rules Hi, we've a Linux workstation with a hardware extension of network interfaces. On this machine we've installed Nistnet and it works. But there are some discussions about defining of rules. Maybe anybody out there can help us. The network interfaces of our workstation work on different class C networks, eg. 192.10.14.0 and 192.10.16.0 and 192.10.60.0. The workstation is also defined as router to route messages from one network to another. This works. The question now is wheter it is possible to mix the definition of rules for a set of rules for all networks and special definitions for the singular networks. E.g. We want to restrict the bandwith over all networks to 3kbps and at the same time we want restrict the bandwith of each network to 0,5 kbps. Is this possible? How? Please give an example Thanks Rainer Hirschmiller _______________________________________________ nistnet mailing list nistnet@antd.nist.gov http://www-x.antd.nist.gov/mailman/listinfo/nistnet