MLUG: RE: [MLUG] Ethernet hubs
RE: [MLUG] Ethernet hubs
Email address obfuscation in effect -- please click here to turn it off.

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Hook him up by a nul modem limited to something shitty to the rest of the
network? Or do like I sometimes do and set gnapster to like nice 19 and
then run something like dist net at a less nice value so the app slows
down a lil. can't download faster than the app can handle the input
usually.. works w/ some things and not w/ others.

*^*^*^*
Have the courage to take your own thoughts seriously, for they will shape
you. -- Albert Einstein

On Fri, 2 Feb 2001, Neil Bradshaw wrote:

> I want to be able to throttle my roommate's traffic, period. He likes to
> download CDs at a time, and when he does my ping in Quake is
> horrible. This, after a day of school and work, understandibly pisses me
> off. He's cool with the throttling idea, but I just have to figure out a
> reasonable way to do it. I have a 486 DX/2 with Red Hat 7.0 + updates
> already on it, ready to be turned into a firewall. That might be the best
> option.
> 
> Or, I could just yank his ethernet cord out of our hub *grin*.
> 
> +--------------------------------------------+
> | Neil Bradshaw                              |
> | Computing and Network Security Office      |
> | Information and Access Technology Services |
> | University of Missouri-Columbia            |
> | (573) 884-2260                             |
> | EMAIL:PROTECTED (Work and School)        |
> | EMAIL:PROTECTED (Personal)     |
> +--------------------------------------------+
> 
> On Fri, 2 Feb 2001, McNutt, Justin M. wrote:
> 
> > Do you mean "throttle all traffic" or "throttle broadcast/multicast"?
> > 
> > If you mean the former, there are several vendor's switches that do this,
> > but they are prohibitively expensive.
> > 
> > If you mean the latter, most switches have done this since about 1996, but
> > it's not as useful.
> > 
> > I haven't seen any hubs that offer either one, and they shouldn't, since
> > hubs are layer 1 devices.  10/100 "hubs" are switches, so they may be able
> > to offer throttling between the 10 and 100Mb segments.
> > 
> > --J
> > 
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Neil Bradshaw
> > To: EMAIL:PROTECTED
> > Sent: 2/2/01 10:34 AM
> > Subject: RE: [MLUG] Ethernet hubs
> > 
> > While we're on the subject of ethernet hubs, does anyone know of a
> > hub/switch that will allow individual ports to be throttled?
> > 
> > +--------------------------------------------+
> > | Neil Bradshaw                              |
> > | Computing and Network Security Office      |
> > | Information and Access Technology Services |
> > | University of Missouri-Columbia            |
> > | (573) 884-2260                             |
> > | EMAIL:PROTECTED (Work and School)        |
> > | EMAIL:PROTECTED (Personal)     |
> > +--------------------------------------------+
> > 
> > 
> > --
> > To unsubscribe, send a new message with no subject and the words
> > "unsubscribe members" in the body to EMAIL:PROTECTED
> > 
> > Archives are available at http://mlug.missouri.edu/list-archives/
> > --
> > To unsubscribe, send a new message with no subject and the words
> > "unsubscribe members" in the body to EMAIL:PROTECTED
> > 
> > Archives are available at http://mlug.missouri.edu/list-archives/
> > 
> 
> --
> To unsubscribe, send a new message with no subject and the words
> "unsubscribe members" in the body to EMAIL:PROTECTED
> 
> Archives are available at http://mlug.missouri.edu/list-archives/
> 

--
To unsubscribe, send a new message with no subject and the words
"unsubscribe members" in the body to EMAIL:PROTECTED

Archives are available at http://mlug.missouri.edu/list-archives/