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Date:      Mon, 7 Aug 2000 16:50:32 -0400
From:      Andrew BOGECHO <andrewb@cs.mcgill.ca>
To:        freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Port throttling
Message-ID:  <20000807165032.S483@cs.mcgill.ca>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSF.3.96.1000804164719.2340A-100000@iceberg.web-walrus.com>; from Grandpa Walrus on Fri, Aug 04, 2000 at 04:52:25PM -0500
References:  <Pine.BSF.3.96.1000804164719.2340A-100000@iceberg.web-walrus.com>

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Mon Aug  7 16:48:32 EDT 2000

Hi,

I believe that ipfw does it. Have a look at the man page for more
info. Although, I am sure there are other ways, this should do
the trick.

Andrew.

On Fri, Aug 04, 2000 at 04:52:25PM -0500, Grandpa Walrus wrote:
> Is there a good way, under FreeBSD 3.x (or 4.x, or whatever) to tell the
> BSD system that a given interface has a maximum speed of, say, 256k?
> 
> i.e.
> 
> rl0	-	10baseT		(Gateway to router)
> rl1	-	128k		(LAN interface)
> rl2	-	256k		(Client's Dedicated Server)
> rl3	-	256k		(Client's Dedicated Server)
> 
> This would be used to prevent client networks (co-located) from utilizing
> more bandwidth than they should be, to avoid clogging our main outward
> pipe.  
> 
> Alternatively, is there an appliance that could do this?  (a managed
> switch/hub, perhaps?)  This would be the preferable solution, but a
> FreeBSD system would probably be less costly.
> 
> Any help you could give would be greatly appreciated
> 
> -----------
> Robert Wall                                  sales@web-walrus.com
> Web Walrus Media                           
> 405 S Farwell St #23C
> Eau Claire, WI 54701                         (715) 855-0189
> 
> 
> 
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