* [LARTC] Split bursty bandwidth equally
@ 2004-04-26 6:55 Mihai Vlad
2004-04-28 8:22 ` Andy Furniss
0 siblings, 1 reply; 2+ messages in thread
From: Mihai Vlad @ 2004-04-26 6:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: lartc
Hello again,
Is it possible to split a bandwidth equally among clients regardless of its
current link speed?
I have a link that can get bursty at times. At any given time the N active
sessions (the ones with non-empty queues) need to be serviced
simultaneously, each at a rate of 1/N'th of the link speed.
My case is an internet connection that oscillates between 96 kbps and 256
kbps. I cannot predict the connection speed in order to use the classical
HTB (to set up a 96/96 kbps class), because I would loose a lot of bandwidth
when the speed goes over 96kbps.
This might not be a strictly HTB related question. It doesn't matter if I
use htb, cbq pr other technique. I do not have to guarantee a certain amount
of bandwidth to one computer in the LAN, just to split the existing
bandwidth equally among the N active clients.
I know... Someone said here "Use sfq or esfq". Unfortunately I am not very
bright and a piece of code would be excellent :) In fact I tried a lot of
setups but did not get any satisfactory result.
Please help!
Thanks in advance,
Mihai Vlad
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* Re: [LARTC] Split bursty bandwidth equally
2004-04-26 6:55 [LARTC] Split bursty bandwidth equally Mihai Vlad
@ 2004-04-28 8:22 ` Andy Furniss
0 siblings, 0 replies; 2+ messages in thread
From: Andy Furniss @ 2004-04-28 8:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: lartc
Mihai Vlad wrote:
> Hello again,
>
> Is it possible to split a bandwidth equally among clients regardless of its
> current link speed?
>
> I have a link that can get bursty at times. At any given time the N active
> sessions (the ones with non-empty queues) need to be serviced
> simultaneously, each at a rate of 1/N'th of the link speed.
Is this upstream or downstream traffic?
If it's upstream, what causes the variation, eg. is it RADSL and you get
a long queue in your modem buffer, or is it shaped later at ISP - what
is the link type/behavior ?
>
> My case is an internet connection that oscillates between 96 kbps and 256
> kbps. I cannot predict the connection speed in order to use the classical
> HTB (to set up a 96/96 kbps class), because I would loose a lot of bandwidth
> when the speed goes over 96kbps.
>
> This might not be a strictly HTB related question. It doesn't matter if I
> use htb, cbq pr other technique. I do not have to guarantee a certain amount
> of bandwidth to one computer in the LAN, just to split the existing
> bandwidth equally among the N active clients.
>
> I know... Someone said here "Use sfq or esfq". Unfortunately I am not very
> bright and a piece of code would be excellent :) In fact I tried a lot of
> setups but did not get any satisfactory result.
Depends on the exact nature of your link, hardware and the direction of
the variable rate. It may be impossible/possible/a bit possible more
detail is needed.
Andy.
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http://mailman.ds9a.nl/mailman/listinfo/lartc HOWTO: http://lartc.org/
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