Packet shaping is implemented directly in the Linux kernel, and you can configure it with the standard ip+tc tools. Information on this is in [1]. For monitoring traffic based on protocol you need to use [2], to create a firewall config to account for packets of the type you choose. Then you need [3] to be able to graph them in an understandable way.
[1] http://www.lartc.org [2] http://l7-filter.sourceforge.net/L7-HOWTO-Netfilter [3] http://www.rrdtool.org and alternative to [2] and [3] is of course bandwidthd [4] [4] http://bandwidthd.sourceforge.net/ HTH On 5/6/05, James Caasi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi Guys, > > Are there any new open source versions of Packetshaper? Or at least > a GUI that can monitor traffic based on protocol.. > > James > > __________________________________________________ > Do You Yahoo!? > Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around > http://mail.yahoo.com > -- > Philippine Linux Users' Group (PLUG) Mailing List > [email protected] (#PLUG @ irc.free.net.ph) > Official Website: http://plug.linux.org.ph > Searchable Archives: http://marc.free.net.ph > . > To leave, go to > http://lists.q-linux.com/mailman/listinfo/plug > . > Are you a Linux newbie? To join the newbie list, go to > http://lists.q-linux.com/mailman/listinfo/ph-linux-newbie > > -- Philippine Linux Users' Group (PLUG) Mailing List [email protected] (#PLUG @ irc.free.net.ph) Official Website: http://plug.linux.org.ph Searchable Archives: http://marc.free.net.ph . To leave, go to http://lists.q-linux.com/mailman/listinfo/plug . Are you a Linux newbie? To join the newbie list, go to http://lists.q-linux.com/mailman/listinfo/ph-linux-newbie
