On 8/8/05, Joe Klemmer <klemmerj@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Kenneth Kalmer wrote: > > > CBQ is still part of CentOS, > > Really? I couldn't find it in the yum repos. Yes really, see below... > > # yum search shapecfg > Searching Packages: > Setting up Repos > update 100% |=========================| 951 B 00:00 > > base 100% |=========================| 1.1 kB 00:00 > > addons 100% |=========================| 951 B 00:00 > > extras 100% |=========================| 1.1 kB 00:00 > > Reading repository metadata in from local files > update : ################################################## 84/84 > base : ################################################## 1406/1406 > extras : ################################################## 30/30 > No Matches found It's not a package on it's own. It's in the iproute2 package, for more information see the following man pages: tc(8), tc-cbq(8), tc-htb(8), tc-sfq(8), tc-red(8), tc-tbf(8), tc-pfifo(8), tc-bfifo(8), tc-pfifo_fast(8), tc-filters(8) I've never used shapecfg, but I can assume that it's only a utility for setting up CBQ-based traffic shaping... cbq.init and htb.init will do the same... > > > but i'd highly recommend using HTB instead. > > Ok, thanks. I'm off to freshmeat. Save the butchery for later, goto http://sourceforge.net/projects/htbinit/ http://luxik.cdi.cz/~devik/qos/htb/ (very technical, but intersting) http://lartc.org/howto (a definite must!!!) > > > If you want to use CBQ, you can the cbq.init script from > > http://sourceforge.net/projects/cbqinit/ and I'd also recommend having > > a look at http://lartc.org > > Again, thanks. Always a pleasure to help some bandwidth get into shape -- Kenneth Kalmer kenneth.kalmer@xxxxxxxxx Folding@home stats http://vspx27.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/main.py?qtype=userpage&username=kenneth%2Ekalmer