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Date:      Tue, 03 Feb 2004 23:44:11 +0100
From:      Bjorn Eikeland <bjorn@eikeland.info>
To:        "freebsd-questions@freebsd.org" <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: [5.2.1-RC, IPFW] Traffic Shaping
Message-ID:  <opr2tf3xx2omdbx5@localhost>
In-Reply-To: <opr2tfk3s8omdbx5@localhost>
References:  <40201C10.6070405@coocoo.za.net> <opr2tfk3s8omdbx5@localhost>

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Ok, so miss read the question a bit... (Was thinking the bridge was the
mail server too - used to my own hardware shortage :)

But still, I think you'll get it working by swapping 'me' with the ip of 
your
mail server. Can also use subnet to allow your own net unlimited access.

> There isnt much you can really do as to shape incomming traffic, however
> you can limit how fast you accept the incomming data. (At least this is
> what im used to from my little experience with linux.)
>
> I tried* the following rule, and in theroy it sounds up to the job:
> ipfw add pipe 1 tcp from not me to me smtp
>
> *)when I say tried I really mean ipfw didnt complain, but no traffic
> actually saw it.
>
> Obviously you can replace 'me' with your actual ip and 'smtp' with 25, 
> but
> I find its easier to read english.
>
> Feel free to try that though :)
>
>> Hi all,
>>
>> I am using FreeBSD 5.2.1-RC + IPFW2 + DUMMYNET to do traffic shaping.
>> This works well for my setup.
>> I have the following configuration:
>> The machine has 2 NIC's, xl0, dc0. The kernel is configured to do 
>> bridging. The bridged
>> packets is passed to IPFW (net.link.ether.bridge.ipfw=1).
>>
>> I shape traffic this way:
>> The bridge is setup between a router and an internal mail server.
>> I am limiting bandwith using the following rules:
>> pipe 1 config bw 16KBytes/s
>> pipe 2 config bw 12KBytes/s
>>
>> and then:
>>
>> add pipe 1 tcp from any to any 25  (limit incoming traffic towards smtp)
>> add pipe 2 tcp from any 110 to any (limit outgoing traffic from pop3)
>>
>> Yesterday, while browsing through Absolute BSD by Michael Lucas I read 
>> an interesting part:
>> You cannot shape incoming traffic the way that I do at the moment.
>>
>> Now, my question:
>> How can I limit the incoming traffic towards my smtp server properly?
>>
>> Any advice would be apreciated.
>>
>> Thank you,
>> Regards
>> Jaco van Tonder
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