Hi Roy, It seems that I wasn't clear. Lets give an example. I have a machine with a single ethernet interface, with two IP addresses A and B. This is done using two virtual interfaces. A is my IP address in ISP-A. B is my IP address in ISP-B. The physical line to ISP-A is 1.5Mbps. The physical line to ISP-B is 256kbps. I want to shape the traffic so that, for example, HTTP traffic will take no more than 10% of the ISP-B link, and no more than 20% of the ISP-A link. There seems to be no way to do this without the ability to attach a qdisc to a virtual interface. Please correct me if I am wrong... Aron ------------------------------- From: "Roy" <roy@xxxxxx> To: <LARTC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: Re: virtual interface Date: Mon, 5 Jan 2004 16:29:40 +0200 There is no need to use imq ant everything is easy to do anyway interface name is usefull only to attach qdisc to something and that all you need to clasify packets by source or destination ip antway if you have idea how to use imq there then just use your interface instead. also why it is so obvious that they must be shaped separately, ususly it is much better to shape everything in one einterface Hi guys, I have this problem too. I have two Internet routers connected to the same Ethernet interface (using a hub). And each one obviously needs to be shaped seperately. It seems like a very common and logical scenario and this issue seems like a design problem. Any Ideas on a workaround? Perhaps IMQ can be used somehow (although I hear it has serious stability problems...)? Aron _______________________________________________ LARTC mailing list / LARTC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://mailman.ds9a.nl/mailman/listinfo/lartc HOWTO: http://lartc.org/