Bandwidth Limiting HOWTO
Tomasz Chmielewski
tch@metalab.unc.edu
Revision History | ||
---|---|---|
Revision 0.9 | 2001-11-20 | Revised by: tc |
- Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1. New versions of this document
- 1.2. Disclaimer
- 1.3. Copyright and License
- 1.4. Feedback and corrections
- 1.5. Thanks
- 2. Before We Start
- 2.1. What do we need
- 2.2. How does it work?
- 3. Installing and Configuring Necessary Software
- 4. Dealing with Other Bandwidth-consuming Protocols Using CBQ
- 5. Frequently Asked Questions
- 5.1. Is it possible to limit bandwidth on a per-user basis with delay pools?
- 5.2. How do I make wget work with Squid?
- 5.3. I set up my own SOCKS server listening on port 1080, and now I'm not able to connect to any irc server.
- 5.4. I don't like when Kazaa or Audiogalaxy is filling up all my upload bandwidth.
- 5.5. My outgoing mail server is eating up all my bandwidth.
- 5.6. Can I limit my own FTP or WWW server in a manner similar it is shown in the question above?
- 5.7. Is it possible to limit bandwidth on a per-user basis with cbq.init script?
- 5.8. Whenever I start cbq.init, it says sch_cbq is missing.
- 5.9. CBQ sometimes doesn't work for no reason.
- 5.10. Delay pools are stupid; why can't I download something at full speed when the network is used only by me?
- 5.11. My downloads break at 23:59 with "acl day time 09:00-23:59" in squid.conf. Can I do something about it?
- 5.12. Squid's logs grow and grow very fast, what can I do about it?
- 5.13. CBQ is stupid; why can't I download something at full speed when the network is used only be me?
- 6. Miscellaneous
- 6.1. Useful resources
Next | ||
Introduction |