On Sunday 03 January 2016 at 09:42:21, Christian Kunkel wrote: > Am 03.01.2016 um 01:14 schrieb Antony Stone; > > >> On Sunday 03 January 2016 at 00:46:39, Christian Kunkel wrote: > >> > >> Hey guys, > >> > >> is there any way i can do some traffic shaping with squid? > > > > Yes, but it's nowhere near as good as doing it with IP tools on the > > underlying O/S. > > ok. thats what i thought too. any hint there? http://lartc.org/howto/lartc.qdisc.html https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Advanced_traffic_control http://www.squid-cache.org/Doc/config/tcp_outgoing_mark/ > >> I've been thinking to create a multiple ports with squid and limit the > >> ports. How can i do that? > > > > No idea, without knowing where you're starting from. > > http_port 1337 > http_port 1338 > and so on. every user gets his oen port. by using delay pools or something > i can limit their speed then?! How many users do you have? > >> Or is there a better way? > > > > Almost certainly. > > > > Explain, in as much detail as you can: > > > > - what your networking setup is > > what do you need to know here? Well, for example: - are your clients all in a consistent network range, or are they spread across the Internet? - are multiple clients NATted behind a single router, or do they have unique IP addresses as far as Squid is concerned? - if clients are NATted, can you use a VPN so that Squid can see the real IP address of each user? - are you trying to limit the *inbound* bandwidth to Squid per user, or the *outbound* bandwidth from Squid to each user? - how many IP addresses and network interfaces does the Squid server have? - what's the primary reason for wanting to restrict the bandwidth per user? Regards, Antony. -- "In fact I wanted to be John Cleese and it took me some time to realise that the job was already taken." - Douglas Adams Please reply to the list; please *don't* CC me. _______________________________________________ squid-users mailing list squid-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.squid-cache.org/listinfo/squid-users