Hi, I'm using a script: #!/bin/bash NETZWERK_DEVICE="eth0" OUT_REMOTE_SPEED_MAX="7500kbit" OUT_LOCAL_SPEED_MAX="80000kbit" OUTGOING_SPEED_3="$1" INCOMING_SPEED_1="$1" INCOMING_SPEED_2="200kbit" /sbin/tc qdisc del dev ${NETZWERK_DEVICE} root 2> /dev/null /sbin/tc qdisc add dev ${NETZWERK_DEVICE} root handle 1:0 htb default 1 /sbin/tc class add dev ${NETZWERK_DEVICE} parent 1:0 classid 1:1 htb rate ${OUT_REMOTE_SPEED_MAX} This is OK in behavior. Best regards Helmut Drodofsky Viele Grüße i.V. Helmut Drodofsky ________________________________ Internet XS Service GmbH Heßbrühlstraße 15 D-70565 Stuttgart Fon : 0711/781941-0 Fax : 0711/781941-79 Geschäftsführer: Dr. Roswitha Hahn-Drodofsky HRB 21091 Stuttgart USt.ID.: DE 190582774 Am 04.02.2013 05:28, schrieb Bent Terp: > Hi all, > > I tried last week to do traffic shaping on a production system, > object of the exercise was simply to throttle the outgoing traffic. > > tc qdisc add dev eth4 root tbf rate 300mbit burst 300kb latency 50ms > > But the server became rather instable, crashing repeatedly without > anything in the logs. > > Can anybody spot glaring mistakes in the tc command above, > or tell me what I should have done instead? > > with kind regards, > Bent Terp > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos