Simple Traffic Shaping/Control
Tom
Eastep
2009
2010
Thomas M. Eastep
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version
1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with
no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover, and with no Back-Cover
Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled
GNU Free Documentation
License
.
Introduction
Traffic shaping and control was originally introduced into Shorewall
in version 2.2.5. That facility was based on Arne Bernin's
tc4shorewall and is generally felt to be complex
and difficult to use.
In Shorewall 4.4.6, a second traffic shaping facility that is simple
to understand and to configure was introduced. This newer facility is
described in this document while the original facility is documented in
Complex Traffic
Shaping/Control.
Enabling Simple Traffic Shaping
Simple traffic shaping is enabled by setting TC_ENABLED=Simple in
shorewall.conf(5). You
then add an entry for your external interface to shorewall-tcinterfaces(5)
(/etc/shorewall/tcinterfaces).
Assuming that your external interface is eth0:
#INTERFACE TYPE IN-BANDWIDTH
eth0 External
With this simple configuration, packets to be sent through interface
eth0 will be assigned to a priority band based on the value of their TOS
field:
TOS Bits Means Linux Priority BAND
------------------------------------------------------------
0x0 0 Normal Service 0 Best Effort 2
0x2 1 Minimize Monetary Cost 1 Filler 3
0x4 2 Maximize Reliability 0 Best Effort 2
0x6 3 mmc+mr 0 Best Effort 2
0x8 4 Maximize Throughput 2 Bulk 3
0xa 5 mmc+mt 2 Bulk 3
0xc 6 mr+mt 2 Bulk 3
0xe 7 mmc+mr+mt 2 Bulk 3
0x10 8 Minimize Delay 6 Interactive 1
0x12 9 mmc+md 6 Interactive 1
0x14 10 mr+md 6 Interactive 1
0x16 11 mmc+mr+md 6 Interactive 1
0x18 12 mt+md 4 Int. Bulk 2
0x1a 13 mmc+mt+md 4 Int. Bulk 2
0x1c 14 mr+mt+md 4 Int. Bulk 2
0x1e 15 mmc+mr+mt+md 4 Int. Bulk 2
When dequeueing, band 1 is tried first and only if it did not
deliver a packet does the system try band 2, and so onwards. Maximum
reliability packets should therefore go to band 1, minimum delay to band 2
and the rest to band 3.
If you run both an IPv4 and an IPv6 firewall on your system, you
should define each interface in only one of the two
configurations.
Customizing Simple Traffic Shaping
The default mapping of TOS to bands can be changed using the
TC_PRIOMAP setting in shorewall.conf(5). The default
setting of this option is:
TC_PRIOMAP="2 3 3 3 2 3 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2"
These entries map Linux Priority to priority BAND. So only entries
0, 1, 2, 4 and 6 in the map are relevant to TOS->BAND mapping.
Further customizations can be defined in shorewall-tcpri(5)
(/etc/shorewall/tcpri). Using that file, you
can:
Assign traffic entering the firewall on a particular interface
to a specific priority band:
#BAND PROTO PORT(S) ADDRESS INTERFACE HELPER
2 - - - eth1
In this example, traffic from eth1 will be assigned to priority
band 2.
When an INTERFACE is specified, the PROTO, PORT(S) and ADDRESS
column must contain '-'.
Assign traffic from a particular IP address to a specific
priority band:
#BAND PROTO PORT(S) ADDRESS INTERFACE HELPER
1 - - 192.168.1.44
In this example, traffic from 192.168.1.44 will be assigned to
priority band 1.
When an ADDRESS is specified, the PROTO, PORT(S) and INTERFACE
columns must be empty.
Assign traffic to/from a particular application to a specific
priority band:
#BAND PROTO PORT(S) ADDRESS INTERFACE HELPER
1 udp 1194
In that example, OpenVPN traffic is assigned to priority band
1.
Assign traffic that uses a particular Netfilter helper to a
particular priority band:
#BAND PROTO PORT(S) ADDRESS INTERFACE HELPER
1 - - - - sip
In this example, SIP and associated RTP traffic will be assigned
to priority band 1 (assuming that the nf_conntrack_sip helper is
loaded).
It is suggested that entries specifying an INTERFACE be placed the
top of the file. That way, the band assigned to a particular packet will
be the last entry matched by the packet.
Packets which match no entry in shorewall-tcpri(5) are
assigned to priority bands using their TOS field as previously
described.
One cause of high latency on interactive traffic can be that queues
are building up at your ISP's gateway router. If you suspect that is
happening in your case, you can try to eliminate the problem by using the
IN-BANDWIDTH setting in shorewall-tcinterfaces(5).
The contents of the column are a rate. For
defining the rate, use kbit or kbps (for Kilobytes per second) and make sure there
is NO space between the number and the unit (it is 100kbit not 100 kbit).
mbit, mbps or a raw number (which means bytes) can be
used, but note that only integer numbers are supported (0.5 is not valid).
To pick an appropriate setting, we recommend that you start by setting
IN-BANDWIDTH significantly below your measured download bandwidth (20% or
so). While downloading, measure the ping response time from the firewall
to the upstream router as you gradually increase the setting. The optimal
setting is at the point beyond which the ping time increases sharply as
you increase the setting.
Simple Traffic Shaping is only appropriate on interfaces where
output queuing occurs. As a consequence, you usually only use it on
extermal interfaces. There are cases where you may need to use it on an
internal interface (a VPN interface, for example). If so, just add an
entry to shorewall-tcinterfaces(5):
#INTERFACE TYPE IN-BANDWIDTH
tun0 Internal
Additional Reading
The PRIO(8) (tc-prio) manpage has additional information on the
facility that Shorewall Simple Traffic Shaping is based on.
Please note that Shorewall numbers the bands 1-3 whereas PRIO(8)
refers to them as bands 0-2.