Hi Thank you very much for the replies. I've heared that tc rules can be directly executed for each class (Please correct me if I'm wrong) instead of creating the HTB files in /etc/sysconfig/htb/. Which method is preferable. Right now I'm doing QoS for a pool of 254 IP's, for which I've written separate 254 class files in /etc/sysconfig/htb, including the interface (eth0) and root class. Is this the right method ? If I can move ahead with the same setup, and create files for 3000 IP's will there be any sort of issues. Please suggest me. Thank you regards Vinoos. On Thu, 19 Feb 2004 19:40:54 +0100 Stef Coene <stef.coene@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Monday 16 February 2004 12:12, Vinu Chandran wrote: > > Hi all > > I would like to implement QoS using the HTB utility. My network might get > > increased to around 3000 clients. I would like to know is there any > > limitation in using HTB for a network like this ? Can I move ahead in > > configuring the same ? Is there any other similar possible methods thru > > which I can achieve this ? I need to assign shared and dedicated bandwidth > > to our customers. > Most of the limitations are related to the active classes and flows in the > network. Fast CPU and enough memory will help. > > > Can I do Qos (shared and dedicated) for individual (3000 approx.) IP's > > separately ? > Yes. > > > Will there be any performance issues in real time ? > Yes, each device in the network gives a delay. But I don't think you will > notice the extra delays. > > Stef > > -- > stef.coene@xxxxxxxxx > "Using Linux as bandwidth manager" > http://www.docum.org/ > #lartc @ irc.openprojects.net > _______________________________________________ > LARTC mailing list / LARTC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > http://mailman.ds9a.nl/mailman/listinfo/lartc HOWTO: http://lartc.org/ > _______________________________________________ LARTC mailing list / LARTC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://mailman.ds9a.nl/mailman/listinfo/lartc HOWTO: http://lartc.org/