Hi all. debian.uchicago.edu has angered the local network admins by being too much of a bandwidth hog, and it's time to throttle it. I'm reading up on tc(8) and friends, but this tool is a lot more powerful and flexible than I need it to be, and so are all the examples I can find (for example see http://defiant.coinet.com/iproute2/Linux-ANO/node48.html).
I don't really have time to become an expert in traffic shaping. I've been given a limit for this machine from the networking guys, and I just want to slap on one rule that says, in effect, "don't send more than N packets per second[0] off campus" while leaving on-campus traffic unrestricted. I suspect that I'll end up using one or two very simple tc commands, but right now it looks like I'll have to read a lot and experiment for days before I figure out what they are. [0] the limit from networking is actually expressed per month, but I figure I'll have to write the rule in terms of seconds, for whatever that's worth. Can anyone recommend a site that covers traffic control from a more down-to-earth perspective? Or is anyone running a server that limits its own bandwidth, and willing to share your configs for comparison? Thanks, -mrj -- # Michael Jinks, IB # JFI/MRSEC/EFI Computing # University of Chicago # Reader! Think not that technical information ought not be called speech; -- Anonymous, "How to decrypt a DVD" -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]