shorewall6-tcinterfaces
5
tcinterfaces
Shorewall6 file
/etc/shorewall6/tcinterfaces
Description
This file lists the interfaces that are subject to simple traffic
shaping. Simple traffic shaping is enabled by setting TC_ENABLED=Simple in
shorewall6.conf(5).
A note on the bandwidth definition used in this
file:
don't use a space between the integer value and the unit: 30kbit
is valid while 30 kbit is not.
you can use one of the following units:
kbps
Kilobytes per second.
mbps
Megabytes per second.
kbit
Kilobits per second.
mbit
Megabits per second.
bps or number
Bytes per second.
k or kb
Kilo bytes.
m or mb
Megabytes.
Only whole integers are allowed.
The columns in the file are as follows (where the column name is
followed by a different name in parentheses, the different name is used in
the alternate specification syntax).
INTERFACE
The logical name of an interface. If you run both IPv4 and
IPv6 Shorewall firewalls, a given interface should only be listed in
one of the two configurations.
TYPE - [external|internal]
Optional. If given specifies whether the interface is
external (facing toward the
Internet) or internal (facing
toward a local network) and enables SFQ flow classification.
Simple traffic shaping is only useful on interfaces where
queuing occurs. As a consequence, internal interfaces seldom
benefit from simple traffic shaping. VPN interfaces are an
exception because the encapsulated packets are later transferred
over a slower external link.
IN-BANDWIDTH (in_bandwidth) -
{-|bandwidth[:burst]|~bandwidth[:interval:decay_interval]}
The incoming bandwidth of that interface.
Please note that you are not able to do traffic shaping on incoming
traffic, as the traffic is already received before you could do so.
But this allows you to define the maximum traffic allowed for this
interface in total, if the rate is exceeded, the packets are
dropped. You want this mainly if you have a DSL or Cable connection
to avoid queuing at your providers side.
If you don't want any traffic to be dropped, set this to a
value to zero in which case Shorewall will not create an ingress
qdisc. Must be set to zero if the REDIRECTED INTERFACES column is
non-empty.
The optional burst option was added in Shorewall 4.4.18. The
default burst is 10kb. A larger
burst can help make the
bandwidth more accurate; often for fast
lines, the enforced rate is well below the specified
bandwidth.
What is described above creates a rate/burst policing filter.
Beginning with Shorewall 4.4.25, a rate-estimated policing filter
may be configured instead. Rate-estimated filters should be used
with Ethernet adapters that have Generic Receive Offload enabled by
default. See Shorewall FAQ
97a.
To create a rate-estimated filter, precede the bandwidth with
a tilde ("~"). The optional interval and decay_interval determine
how often the rate is estimated and how many samples are retained
for estimating. Please see http://ace-host.stuart.id.au/russell/files/tc/doc/estimators.txt
for details.
OUT-BANDWIDTH (out_bandwidth) -
[rate[:[burst][:[latency][:[peek][:[minburst]]]]]]
Added in Shorewall 4.4.13. The terms are defined in
tc-tbf(8).
Shorewall provides defaults as follows:
burst - 10kb
latency - 200ms
The remaining options are defaulted by tc(8).
FILES
/etc/shorewall6/tcinterfaces.
See ALSO
http://ace-host.stuart.id.au/russell/files/tc/doc/sch_tbf.txt
http://ace-host.stuart.id.au/russell/files/tc/doc/estimators.txt
shorewall6(8), shorewall6-accounting(5), shorewall6-actions(5),
shorewall6-blacklist(5), shorewall6-hosts(5), shorewall6-maclist(5),
shorewall6-netmap(5),shorewall6-params(5), shorewall6-policy(5),
shorewall6-providers(5), shorewall6-rtrules(5),
shorewall6-routestopped(5), shorewall6-rules(5), shorewall6.conf(5),
shorewall6-secmarks(5), shorewall6-tcpri, shorewall6-tos(5),
shorewall6-tunnels(5), shorewall6-zones(5)