From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Andrew Beverley Subject: Re: How can I test my tc script? Date: Tue, 08 Feb 2011 06:52:11 +0000 Message-ID: <1297147931.1742.49.camel@andybev> References: <1296699466.4606.14.camel@debian-laptop.OptimumWireless> <1296761916.7587.29.camel@andybev> <1296873898.3644.4.camel@debian-laptop.OptimumWireless> <1296886030.4568.6.camel@debian-laptop.OptimumWireless> <1296908825.1695.8.camel@andybev> <1296958497.3695.18.camel@debian-laptop.OptimumWireless> <1297008953.1613.24.camel@andybev> <1297010113.3928.12.camel@debian-laptop.OptimumWireless> <1297011729.1613.50.camel@andybev> <1297034845.3928.23.camel@debian-laptop.OptimumWireless> <1297126577.1742.34.camel@andybev> <1297131075.3956.2.camel@debian-laptop.OptimumWireless> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Return-path: DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=simple/simple; d=andybev.com; s=selector1; t=1297147944; bh=ouhUL2TcGLhjhFDxCXRXY2oksW2cj7Pcpz/GP G9WQfo=; h=Subject:From:To:Cc:In-Reply-To:References:Content-Type: Date:Message-ID:Mime-Version:Content-Transfer-Encoding; b=qpXGdcJ4 R6uL9tA1lH1mc0kWtS6/HE5MHbA6Vu73gj466qkBYtNYRFZit/idXr8UY/ToytlJjPL AwU1Up29fEDUF6os/UlMVoKx6jGN/FoNI1JtpT8sINoeKskMrEOHyMnaioDeFXMVWtz /QzHc2svPBv3HAJelDvHoyAToMLeM= In-Reply-To: <1297131075.3956.2.camel@debian-laptop.OptimumWireless> Sender: netfilter-owner@vger.kernel.org List-ID: Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" To: wilson@optimumwireless.com Cc: netfilter@vger.kernel.org On Mon, 2011-02-07 at 22:11 -0400, Optimum Wireless Services wrote: > > If you give me a few days I'll send you through my traffic > > prioritisation script. It won't give you the per-user limit, but I can > > almost guarantee that it will give everyone faster access, so you can at > > least use it for a comparison to see what is possible. > > > Thanks. > > I will defenately test it but, I wouldn't like my users to get used to a > higher speed than they're paying for in case I decide to remove it. If > it works, great. > > How many users do you have on the network you're running the script? Maximum signed-up I don't know, but about 100 concurrently actually using it at peak periods.