Автор Тема: Shaper  (Прочетена 4004 пъти)

bashi1

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Shaper
« -: Mar 18, 2008, 16:39 »
Здравейте! Налага ми се да споделям интернет с още един компютър - интернета е със скорос 1Mbit/s. Опитвам се да пусна някакъв шейпър за да го разпределя. Интернета от доставчика ми едва на eth0, а другият компйтър е вързан на eth1. Порових се малко и забелязах, чи по подразбиране има инсталиран шейпър CBQ. Опитах се да си направя едно конфигурационно файлче и сега то изглежда по следния начин:
Примерен код

DEVICE=eth1,10Mbit,1Mbit
RATE=28Kbit
WEIGHT=2Kbit
PRIO=5
RULE=192.168.1.5

Не знам дали трябва де е така, но като се опитам да го пусна ми излиза следното:
Примерен код

root@bashi-desktop:/home/bashi# /etc/init.d/shaper start
Starting CBQ traffic shaping: RTNETLINK answers: No such file or directory
shaper.

Това какво означава - че е пуснат или не шейпъра?
Пробвах да сменя името на конфигурационния файл -сега е cbq-shaper.opit и по подразбиране е в /etc/shaper.
Ето сега какво ми дава:
Примерен код
root@bashi-desktop:/etc/shaper# /etc/init.d/shaper start
Starting CBQ traffic shaping: RTNETLINK answers: No such file or directory
RTNETLINK answers: No such file or directory
RTNETLINK answers: No such file or directory
RTNETLINK answers: No such file or directory

Другото - аз съм вързан към една локална мрежа 10.0.0.0 към която съм дал достъп на 192.168.1.5 - echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward?



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p3tzata_

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Shaper
« Отговор #1 -: Mar 18, 2008, 17:35 »
1.конфигурационно файлче как се казва

2. конфигурационно файлче къде се намира

3. на  файла /etc/init.d/shaper дай да му видим съдържанието

3.1 Името на файла също така не е подходящо
 
П.П.
Дай само по трета точка



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Никое ДОБРО не води до ДОБРО и никое ЗЛО не води до ЗЛО.

bashi1

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Shaper
« Отговор #2 -: Mar 18, 2008, 17:54 »
Ето файла:
Примерен код
#!/bin/bash
#
#    cbq.init v0.7.3
#    Copyright (C) 1999  Pavel Golubev <pg@ksi-linux.com>
#    Copyright (C) 2001-2004  Lubomir Bulej <pallas@kadan.cz>
#    Patches for Debian (largely cosmetic) copyright (C) 2000, 2001, 2002
#    Colin Watson <cjwatson@debian.org>
#    More patches for Debian (largely functional) copyright (C) 2003, 2004
#    David B. Harris <dbharris@debian.org>
#
#    chkconfig:   2345 11 89
#    description: sets up CBQ-based traffic control
#
#    This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
#    it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
#    the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
#    (at your option) any later version.
#
#    This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
#    but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
#    MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
#    GNU General Public License for more details.
#
#    You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
#    along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
#    Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA  02111-1307  USA
#
#    To get the latest version, check on Freshmeat for actual location:
#
#      http://freshmeat.net/projects/cbq.init
#
#
# VERSION HISTORY
# ---------------
# v0.7.3- Deepak Singhal <singhal at users.sourceforge.net>
#     - fix timecheck to not ignore regular TIME rules after
#       encountering a TIME rule that spans over midnight
#   - Nathan Shafer <nicodemus at users.sourceforge.net>
#     - allow symlinks to class files
#   - Seth J. Blank <antifreeze at users.sourceforge.net>
#     - replace hardcoded ip/tc location with variables
#   - Mark Davis <mark.davis at gmx.de>
#     - allow setting of PRIO_{MARK,RULE,REALM} in class file
#   - Fernando Sanch <toptnc at users.sourceforge.net>
#     - allow underscores in interface names
# v0.7.2- Paulo Sedrez
#     - fix time2abs to allow hours with leading zero in TIME rules
#   - Svetlin Simeonov <zvero at yahoo.com>
#     - fix cbq_device_list to allow VLAN interfaces
#   - Mark Davis <mark.davis at gmx.de>
#     - ignore *~ backup files when looking for classes
#   - Mike Boyer <boyer at administrative.com>
#     - fix to allow arguments to be passed to "restart" command
# v0.7.1- Lubomir Bulej <pallas at kadan.cz>
#     - default value for PERTURB
#     - fixed small bug in RULE parser to correctly parse rules with
#       identical source and destination fields
#     - faster initial scanning of DEVICE fields
# v0.7   - Lubomir Bulej <pallas at kadan.cz>
#     - lots of various cleanups and reorganizations; the parsing is now
#       some 40% faster, but the class ID must be in range 0x0002-0xffff
#       (again). Because of the number of internal changes and the above
#       class ID restriction, I bumped the version to 0.7 to indicate
#       something might have got broken :)
#     - changed PRIO_{U32,FW,ROUTE} to PRIO_{RULE,MARK,REALM}
#       for consistency with filter keywords
#     - exposed "compile" command
#   - Catalin Petrescu <taz at dntis.ro>
#     - support for port masks in RULE (u32) filter
#   - Jordan Vrtanoski <obeliks at mt.net.mk>
#     - support for week days in TIME rules
# v0.6.4- Lubomir Bulej <pallas at kadan.cz>
#     - added PRIO_* variables to allow easy control of filter priorities
#     - added caching to speed up CBQ start, the cache is invalidated
#       whenever any of the configuration files changes
#     - updated the readme section + some cosmetic fixes
# v0.6.3- Lubomir Bulej <pallas at kadan.cz>
#     - removed setup of (unnecessary) class 1:1 - all classes
#       now use qdisc's default class 1:0 as their parent
#     - minor fix in the timecheck branch - classes
#       without leaf qdisc were not updated
#     - minor fix to avoid timecheck failure when run
#       at time with minutes equal to 08 or 09
#     - respect CBQ_PATH setting in environment
#     - made PRIO=5 default, rendering it optional in configs
#     - added support for route filter, see notes about REALM keyword
#     - added support for fw filter, see notes about MARK keyword
#     - added filter display to "list" and "stats" commands
#     - readme section update + various cosmetic fixes
# v0.6.2- Catalin Petrescu <taz at dntis.ro>
#     - added tunnels interface handling
# v0.6.1- Pavel Golubev <pg at ksi-linux.com>
#     - added sch_prio module loading
#       (thanks johan at iglo.virtual.or.id for reminding)
#     - resolved errors resulting from stricter syntax checking in bash2
#   - Lubomir Bulej <pallas at kadan.cz>
#     - various cosmetic fixes
# v0.6   - Lubomir Bulej <pallas at kadan.cz>
#     - attempt to limit number of spawned processes by utilizing
#       more of sed power (use sed instead of grep+cut)
#     - simplified TIME parser, using bash builtins
#     - added initial support for SFQ as leaf qdisc
#     - reworked the documentation part a little
#     - incorporated pending patches and ideas submitted by
#       following people for versions 0.3 into version 0.6
#   - Miguel Freitas <miguel at cetuc.puc-rio.br>
#     - in case of overlapping TIME parameters, the last match is taken
#   - Juanjo Ciarlante <jjo at mendoza.gov.ar>
#     - chkconfig tags, list + stats startup parameters
#     - optional tc & ip command logging (into /var/run/cbq-*)
#   - Rafal Maszkowski <rzm at icm.edu.pl>
#     - PEAK parameter for setting TBF's burst peak rate
#     - fix for many config files (use find instead of ls)
# v0.5.1- Lubomir Bulej <pallas at kadan.cz>
#     - fixed little but serious bug in RULE parser
# v0.5   - Lubomir Bulej <pallas at kadan.cz>
#     - added options PARENT, LEAF, ISOLATED and BOUNDED. This allows
#       (with some attention to config file ordering) for creating
#       hierarchical structures of shapers with classes able (or unable)
#       to borrow bandwidth from their parents.
#     - class ID check allows hexadecimal numbers
#     - rewritten & simplified RULE parser
#     - cosmetic changes to improve readability
#     - reorganization to avoid duplicate code (timecheck etc.)
#     - timecheck doesn't check classes without TIME fields anymore
# v0.4  - Lubomir Bulej <pallas at kadan.cz>
#     - small bugfix in RULE parsing code
#     - simplified configuration parsing code
#     - several small cosmetic changes
#     - TIME parameter can be now specified more than once allowing you to
#       differentiate RATE throughout the whole day. Time overlapping is
#       not checked, first match is taken. Midnight wrap (eg. 20:00-6:00)
#       is allowed and taken care of.
# v0.3a4- fixed small bug in IF operator. Thanks to
#     Rafal Maszkowski <rzm at icm.edu.pl>
# v0.3a3- fixed grep bug when using more than 10 eth devices. Thanks to David
#     Trcka <trcka at poda.cz>.
# v0.3a2- fixed bug in "if" operator. Thanks kad at dgtu.donetsk.ua.
# v0.3a - added TIME parameter. Example: TIME=00:00-19:00;64Kbit/6Kbit
#     So, between 00:00 and 19:00 the RATE will be 64Kbit.
#     Just start "cbq.init timecheck" periodically from cron
#     (every 10 minutes for example). DON'T FORGET though, to run
#     "cbq.init start" for CBQ to initialize.
# v0.2  - Some cosmetic changes. Now it is more compatible with old bash
#     version. Thanks to Stanislav V. Voronyi <stas at cnti.uanet.kharkov.ua>.
# v0.1  - First public release
#
#
# README
# ------
#
# First of all - this is just a SIMPLE EXAMPLE of CBQ power.
# Don't ask me "why" and "how" :)
#
# This script is meant to simplify setup and management of relatively simple
# CBQ-based traffic control on Linux. Access to advanced networking features
# of Linux kernel is provided by "ip" and "tc" utilities from A. Kuznetsov's
# iproute2 package, available at ftp://ftp.inr.ac.ru/ip-routing. Because the
# utilities serve primarily to translate user wishes to RTNETLINK commands,
# their interface is rather spartan, intolerant and requires quite a lot of
# typing. And typing is what this script attempts to reduce :)
#
# The advanced networking stuff in Linux is pretty flexible and this script
# aims to bring some of its features to the not-so-hard-core Linux users. Of
# course, there is a tradeoff between simplicity and flexibility and you may
# realize that the flexibility suffered too much for your needs -- time to
# face "ip" and "tc" interface.
#
# To speed up the "start" command, simple caching was introduced in version
# 0.6.4. The caching works so that the sequence of "tc" commands for given
# configuration is stored in a file (/var/cache/cbq.init by default) which
# is used next time the "start" command is run to avoid repeated parsing of
# configuration files. This cache is invalidated whenever any of the CBQ
# configuration files changes. If you want to run "shaper start" without
# caching, run it as "shaper start nocache". If you want to force cache
# invalidation, run it as "shaper start invalidate". Caching is disabled
# if you have logging enabled (ie. CBQ_DEBUG is not empty).
#
# If you only want cqb.init to translate your configuration to "tc" commands,
# use "compile" command which will output "tc" commands required to build
# your configuration. Bear in mind that "compile" does not check if the "tc"
# commands were successful - this is done (in certain places) only when the
# "start nocache" command is used, which is also useful when creating the
# configuration to check whether it is completely valid.
#
# All CBQ parameters are valid for Ethernet interfaces only, The script was
# tested on various Linux kernel versions from series 2.1 to 2.4 and several
# distributions with KSI Linux (Nostromo version) as the premier one.
#
#
# HOW DOES IT WORK?
# -----------------
#
# Every traffic class must be described by a file in the $CBQ_PATH directory
# (/etc/shaper by default) - one file per class.
#
# The config file names must obey mandatory format: cbq-<clsid>.<name> where
# <clsid> is two-byte hexadecimal number in range <0002-FFFF> (which in fact
# is a CBQ class ID) and <name> is the name of the class -- anything to help
# you distinguish the configuration files. For small amount of classes it is
# often possible (and convenient) to let <clsid> resemble bandwidth of the
# class.
#
# Example of valid config name:
#   cbq-1280.My_first_shaper
#
#
# The configuration file may contain the following parameters:
#
### Device parameters
#
# DEVICE=<ifname>,<bandwidth>[,<weight>]   mandatory
# DEVICE=eth0,10Mbit,1Mbit
#
#   <ifname> is the name of the interface you want to control
#      traffic on, e.g. eth0
#   <bandwidth> is the physical bandwidth of the device, e.g. for
#      ethernet 10Mbit or 100Mbit, for arcnet 2Mbit
#   <weight> is tuning parameter that should be proportional to
#      <bandwidth>. As a rule of thumb: <weight> = <bandwidth> / 10
#
# When you have more classes on one interface, it is enough to specify
# <bandwidth> [and <weight>] only once, therefore in other files you only
# need to set DEVICE=<ifname>.
#
### Class parameters
#
# RATE=<speed>               mandatory
# RATE=5Mbit
#
#   Bandwidth allocated to the class. Traffic going through the class is
#   shaped to conform to specified rate. You can use Kbit, Mbit or bps,
#   Kbps and Mbps as suffices. If you don't specify any unit, bits/sec
#   are used. Also note that "bps" means "bytes per second", not bits.
#
# WEIGHT=<speed>             mandatory
# WEIGHT=500Kbit
#
#   Tuning parameter that should be proportional to RATE. As a rule
#   of thumb, use WEIGHT ~= RATE / 10.
#
# PRIO=<1-8>               optional, default 5
# PRIO=5
#
#   Priority of class traffic. The higher the number, the lesser
#   the priority. Priority of 5 is just fine.
#
# PARENT=<clsid>            optional, default not set
# PARENT=1280
#
#   Specifies ID of the parent class to which you want this class be
#   attached. You might want to use LEAF=none for the parent class as
#   mentioned below. By using this parameter and carefully ordering the
#   configuration files, it is possible to create simple hierarchical
#   structures of CBQ classes. The ordering is important so that parent
#   classes are constructed prior to their children.
#
# LEAF=none|tbf|sfq            optional, default "tbf"
#
#   Tells the script to attach specified leaf queueing discipline to CBQ
#   class. By default, TBF is used. Note that attaching TBF to CBQ class
#   shapes the traffic to conform to TBF parameters and prevents the class
#   from borrowing bandwidth from its parent even if you have BOUNDED set
#   to "no". To allow the class to borrow bandwith (provided it is not
#   bounded), you must set LEAF to "none" or "sfq".
#
#   If you want to ensure (approximately) fair sharing of bandwidth among
#   several hosts in the same class, you might want to specify LEAF=sfq to
#   attach SFQ as leaf queueing discipline to that class.
#
# BOUNDED=yes|no            optional, default "yes"
#
#   If set to "yes", the class is not allowed to borrow bandwidth from
#   its parent class in overlimit situation. If set to "no", the class
#   will be allowed to borrow bandwidth from its parent.
#
# Note:   Don't forget to set LEAF to "none" or "sfq", otherwise the class will
#   have TBF attached to itself and will not be able to borrow unused
#   bandwith from its parent.
#
# ISOLATED=yes|no            optional, default "no"
#
#   If set to "yes", the class will not lend unused bandwidth to
#   its children.
#
### TBF qdisc parameters
#
# BUFFER=<bytes>[/<bytes>]         optional, default "10Kb/8"
#
#   This parameter controls the depth of the token bucket. In other
#   words it represents the maximal burst size the class can send.
#   The optional part of parameter is used to determine the length
#   of intervals in packet sizes, for which the transmission times
#   are kept.
#
# LIMIT=<bytes>               optional, default "15Kb"
#
#   This parameter determines the maximal length of backlog. If
#   the queue contains more data than specified by LIMIT, the
#   newly arriving packets are dropped. The length of backlog
#   determines queue latency in case of congestion.
#
# PEAK=<speed>               optional, default not set
#
#   Maximal peak rate for short-term burst traffic. This allows you
#   to control the absolute peak rate the class can send at, because
#   single TBF that allows 256Kbit/s would of course allow rate of
#   512Kbit for half a second or 1Mbit for a quarter of second.
#
# MTU=<bytes>                 optional, default "1500"
#
#   Maximum number of bytes that can be sent at once over the
#   physical medium. This parameter is required when you specify
#   PEAK parameter. It defaults to MTU of ethernet - for other
#   media types you might want to change it.
#
# Note: Setting TBF as leaf qdisc will effectively prevent the class from
#   borrowing bandwidth from the ancestor class, because even if the
#   class allows more traffic to pass through, it is then shaped to
#   conform to TBF.
#
### SFQ qdisc parameters
#
# The SFQ queueing discipline is a cheap way for sharing class bandwidth
# among several hosts. As it is stochastic, the fairness is approximate but
# it will do the job in most cases. If you want real fairness, you should
# probably use WRR (weighted round robin) or WFQ queueing disciplines. Note
# that SFQ does not do any traffic shaping - the shaping is done by the CBQ
# class the SFQ is attached to.
#
# QUANTUM=<bytes>            optional, default not set
#
#   This parameter should not be set lower than link MTU, for ethernet
#   it is 1500b, or (with MAC header) 1514b which is the value used
#   in Alexey Kuznetsov's examples.
#
# PERTURB=<seconds>            optional, default "10"
#
#   Period of hash function perturbation. If unset, hash reconfiguration
#   will never take place which is what you probably don't want. The
#   default value of 10 seconds is probably a good one.
#
### Filter parameters
#
# RULE=[[saddr[/prefix]][:port[/mask]],][daddr[/prefix]][:port[/mask]]
#
#   These parameters make up "u32" filter rules that select traffic for
#   each of the classes. You can use multiple RULE fields per config.
#
#   The optional port mask should only be used by advanced users who
#   understand how the u32 filter works.
#
# Some examples:
#
#   RULE=10.1.1.0/24:80
#      selects traffic going to port 80 in network 10.1.1.0
#
#   RULE=10.2.2.5
#      selects traffic going to any port on single host 10.2.2.5
#
#   RULE=10.2.2.5:20/0xfffe
#      selects traffic going to ports 20 and 21 on host 10.2.2.5
#
#   RULE=:25,10.2.2.128/26:5000
#      selects traffic going from anywhere on port 50 to
#      port 5000 in network 10.2.2.128
#
#   RULE=10.5.5.5:80,
#      selects traffic going from port 80 of single host 10.5.5.5
#
#
#
# REALM=[srealm,][drealm]
#
#   These parameters make up "route" filter rules that classify traffic
#   according to packet source/destination realms. For information about
#   realms, see Alexey Kuznetsov's IP Command Reference. This script
#   does not define any realms, it justs builds "tc filter" commands
#   for you if you need to classify traffic this way.
#
#   Realm is either a decimal number or a string referencing entry in
#   /etc/iproute2/rt_realms (usually).
#
# Some examples:
#
#   REALM=russia,internet
#      selects traffic going from realm "russia" to realm "internet"
#
#   REALM=freenet,
#      selects traffic going from realm "freenet"
#
#   REALM=10
#      selects traffic going to realm 10
#
#
#
# MARK=<mark>
#
#   These parameters make up "fw" filter rules that select traffic for
#   each of the classes accoring to firewall "mark". Mark is a decimal
#   number packets are tagged with if firewall rules say so. You can
#   use multiple MARK fields per config.
#
#
# Note: Rules for different filter types can be combined. Attention must be
#   paid to the priority of filter rules, which can be set below using
#   PRIO_{RULE,MARK,REALM} variables.
#
### Time ranging parameters
#
# TIME=[<dow>,<dow>, ...,<dow>/]<from>-<till>;<rate>/<weight>[/<peak>]
# TIME=0,1,2,5/18:00-06:00;256Kbit/25Kbit
# TIME=60123/18:00-06:00;256Kbit/25Kbit
# TIME=18:00-06:00;256Kbit/25Kbit
#
#   This parameter allows you to differentiate the class bandwidth
#   throughout the day. You can specify multiple TIME parameters, if
#   the times overlap, last match is taken. The fields <rate>, <weight>
#   and <peak> correspond to parameters RATE, WEIGHT and PEAK (which
#   is optional and applies to TBF leaf qdisc only).
#
#   You can also specify days of week when the TIME rule applies. <dow>
#   is numeric, 0 corresponds to sunday, 1 corresponds to monday, etc.
#
###
#
# Sample configuration file: cbq-1280.My_first_shaper
#
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# DEVICE=eth0,10Mbit,1Mbit
# RATE=128Kbit
# WEIGHT=10Kbit
# PRIO=5
# RULE=192.128.1.0/24
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
#
# The configuration says that we will control traffic on 10Mbit ethernet
# device eth0 and the traffic going to network 192.168.1.0 will be
# processed with priority 5 and shaped to rate of 128Kbit.
#
# Note that you can control outgoing traffic only. If you want to control
# traffic in both directions, you must set up CBQ for both interfaces.
#
# Consider the following example:
#
#                    +---------+      192.168.1.1
# BACKBONE -----eth0-|  linux  |-eth1------*-[client]
#                    +---------+
#
# Imagine you want to shape traffic from backbone to the client to 28Kbit
# and traffic in the opposite direction to 128Kbit. You need to setup CBQ
# on both eth0 and eth1 interfaces, thus you need two config files:
#
# cbq-028.backbone-client
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# DEVICE=eth1,10Mbit,1Mbit
# RATE=28Kbit
# WEIGHT=2Kbit
# PRIO=5
# RULE=192.168.1.1
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
#
# cbq-128.client-backbone
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
# DEVICE=eth0,10Mbit,1Mbit
# RATE=128Kbit
# WEIGHT=10Kbit
# PRIO=5
# RULE=192.168.1.1,
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
#
# Pay attention to comma "," in the RULE field - it denotes source address!
#
# Enjoy.
#
#############################################################################

### BEGIN INIT INFO
# Provides:          shaper
# Required-Start:    $local_fs $remote_fs $syslog $network
# Required-Stop:     $local_fs $remote_fs $syslog $network
# Default-Start:     2 3 4 5
# Default-Stop:      0 1 6
# Short-Description: Traffic shaper
### END INIT INFO


export LC_ALL=C

### Command locations
TC=/sbin/tc
IP=/sbin/ip
MP=/sbin/modprobe

DESC="CBQ traffic shaping"

### Default filter priorities (must be different)
PRIO_RULE_DEFAULT=${PRIO_RULE:-100}
PRIO_MARK_DEFAULT=${PRIO_MARK:-200}
PRIO_REALM_DEFAULT=${PRIO_REALM:-300}

### Default CBQ_PATH & CBQ_CACHE settings
CBQ_PATH=${CBQ_PATH:-/etc/shaper}
CBQ_CACHE=${CBQ_CACHE:-/var/cache/shaper/cbq.init}

### Uncomment to enable logfile for debugging
#CBQ_DEBUG="/var/run/cbq-$1"

### Modules to probe for. Uncomment the last CBQ_PROBE
### line if you have QoS support compiled into kernel
CBQ_PROBE="sch_cbq sch_tbf sch_sfq sch_prio"
CBQ_PROBE="$CBQ_PROBE cls_fw cls_u32 cls_route"
#CBQ_PROBE=""

### Keywords required for qdisc & class configuration
CBQ_WORDS="DEVICE|RATE|WEIGHT|PRIO|PARENT|LEAF|BOUNDED|ISOLATED"
CBQ_WORDS="$CBQ_WORDS|PRIO_MARK|PRIO_RULE|PRIO_REALM|BUFFER"
CBQ_WORDS="$CBQ_WORDS|LIMIT|PEAK|MTU|QUANTUM|PERTURB"

. /etc/default/shaper

#############################################################################
############################# SUPPORT FUNCTIONS #############################
#############################################################################

### Get list of network devices
cbq_device_list () {
   ip link show| sed -n "/^[0-9]/ \
      { s/^[0-9]\+: \([a-z0-9._]\+\)[:@].*/\1/; p; }"
} # cbq_device_list


### Remove root class from device $1
cbq_device_off () {
   tc qdisc del dev $1 root 2> /dev/null
} # cbq_device_off


### Remove CBQ from all devices
cbq_off () {
   for dev in `cbq_device_list`; do
      cbq_device_off $dev
   done
} # cbq_off


### Prefixed message
cbq_message () {
   echo -e "**CBQ: $@" >&2
} # cbq_message

### Failure message
cbq_failure () {
   cbq_message "$@"
   exit 1
} # cbq_failure

### Failure w/ cbq-off
cbq_fail_off () {
   cbq_message "$@"
   cbq_off
   exit 1
} # cbq_fail_off

### Failure message, exiting 0
cbq_soft_failure () {
   quiet=$1
   shift
   [ -n "$quiet" ] || cbq_message "$@"
   exit 0
} # cbq_soft_failure

### Failure w/ cbq-off, exiting 0
cbq_soft_fail_off () {
   quiet=$1
   shift
   [ -n "$quiet" ] || cbq_message "$@"
   cbq_off
   exit 0
} # cbq_soft_fail_off


### Convert time to absolute value
cbq_time2abs () {
   local min=${1##*:}; min=${min##0}
   local hrs=${1%%:*}; hrs=${hrs##0}
   echo $[hrs*60 + min]
} # cbq_time2abs


### Display CBQ setup
cbq_show () {
   for dev in `cbq_device_list`; do
      [ `tc qdisc show dev $dev| wc -l` -eq 0 ] && continue
      echo -e "### $dev: queueing disciplines\n"
      tc $1 qdisc show dev $dev; echo

      [ `tc class show dev $dev| wc -l` -eq 0 ] && continue
      echo -e "### $dev: traffic classes\n"
      tc $1 class show dev $dev; echo

      [ `tc filter show dev $dev| wc -l` -eq 0 ] && continue
      echo -e "### $dev: filtering rules\n"
      tc $1 filter show dev $dev; echo
   done
} # cbq_show


### Check configuration and load DEVICES, DEVFIELDS and CLASSLIST from $1
cbq_init () {
   ### Get a list of configured classes
   CLASSLIST=`find $1 \( -type f -or -type l \) -name 'cbq-*' \
      -not -name '*~' -maxdepth 1 -printf "%f\n"| sort`
   [ -z "$CLASSLIST" ] &&
      cbq_soft_failure "$2" "no configuration files found in $1!"

   ### Gather all DEVICE fields from $1/cbq-*
   DEVFIELDS=`find $1 \( -type f -or -type l \) -name 'cbq-*' \
        -not -name '*~' -maxdepth 1| xargs sed -n 's/#.*//; \
        s/[[:space:]]//g; /^DEVICE=[^,]*,[^,]*\(,[^,]*\)\?/ \
        { s/.*=//; p; }'| sort -u`
   [ -z "$DEVFIELDS" ] &&
      cbq_failure "no DEVICE field found in $1/cbq-*!"

   ### Check for different DEVICE fields for the same device
   DEVICES=`echo "$DEVFIELDS"| sed 's/,.*//'| sort -u`
   [ `echo "$DEVICES"| wc -l` -ne `echo "$DEVFIELDS"| wc -l` ] &&
      cbq_failure "different DEVICE fields for single device!\n$DEVFIELDS"
} # cbq_init


### Load class configuration from $1/$2
cbq_load_class () {
   CLASS=`echo $2| sed 's/^cbq-0*//; s/^\([0-9a-fA-F]\+\).*/\1/'`
   CFILE=`sed -n 's/#.*//; s/[[:space:]]//g; /^[[:alnum:]_]\+=[[:alnum:].,:;/*@-_]\+$/ p' $1/$2`

   ### Check class number
   IDVAL=`/usr/bin/printf "%d" 0x$CLASS 2> /dev/null`
   [ $? -ne 0 -o $IDVAL -lt 2 -o $IDVAL -gt 65535 ] &&
      cbq_fail_off "class ID of $2 must be in range <0002-FFFF>!"

   ### Set defaults & load class
   RATE=""; WEIGHT=""; PARENT=""; PRIO=5
   LEAF=tbf; BOUNDED=yes; ISOLATED=no
   BUFFER=10Kb/8; LIMIT=15Kb; MTU=1500
   PEAK=""; PERTURB=10; QUANTUM=""

   PRIO_RULE=$PRIO_RULE_DEFAULT
   PRIO_MARK=$PRIO_MARK_DEFAULT
   PRIO_REALM=$PRIO_REALM_DEFAULT

   eval `echo "$CFILE"| grep -E "^($CBQ_WORDS)="`

   ### Require RATE/WEIGHT
   [ -z "$RATE" -o -z "$WEIGHT" ] &&
      cbq_fail_off "missing RATE or WEIGHT in $2!"

   ### Class device
   DEVICE=${DEVICE%%,*}
   [ -z "$DEVICE" ] && cbq_fail_off "missing DEVICE field in $2!"

   BANDWIDTH=`echo "$DEVFIELDS"| sed -n "/^$DEVICE,/ \
        { s/[^,]*,\([^,]*\).*/\1/; p; q; }"`

   ### Convert to "tc" options
   PEAK=${PEAK:+peakrate $PEAK}
   PERTURB=${PERTURB:+perturb $PERTURB}
   QUANTUM=${QUANTUM:+quantum $QUANTUM}

   [ "$BOUNDED" = "no" ] && BOUNDED="" || BOUNDED="bounded"
   [ "$ISOLATED" = "yes" ] && ISOLATED="isolated" || ISOLATED=""
} # cbq_load_class


#############################################################################
#################################### INIT ###################################
#############################################################################

### Check for presence of ip-route2 in usual place
# Debian change: we don't - this initscript will remain in-place even
# after the package has been removed. So even if its dependencies
# aren't around (iproute namely), we don't 'exit 1', we exit gracefully.
[ -x "$TC" ] && [ -x "$IP" ] || exit 0
# cbq_failure "ip-route2 utilities not installed or executable!"


### ip/tc wrappers
if [ "$1" = "compile" ]; then
   ### no module probing
   CBQ_PROBE=""

   ip () {
      $IP "$@"
   } # ip

   ### echo-only version of "tc" command
   tc () {
      echo "$TC $@"
   } # tc

elif [ -n "$CBQ_DEBUG" ]; then
   echo -e "# `date`" > $CBQ_DEBUG

   ### Logging version of "ip" command
   ip () {
      echo -e "\n# ip $@" >> $CBQ_DEBUG
      $IP "$@" 2>&1 | tee -a $CBQ_DEBUG
   } # ip

   ### Logging version of "tc" command
   tc () {
      echo -e "\n# tc $@" >> $CBQ_DEBUG
      $TC "$@" 2>&1 | tee -a $CBQ_DEBUG
   } # tc
else
   ### Default wrappers
   
   ip () {
      $IP "$@"
   } # ip
   
   tc () {
      $TC "$@"
   } # tc
fi # ip/tc wrappers


case "$1" in

#############################################################################
############################### START/COMPILE ###############################
#############################################################################

start|compile)

[ "$1" = "start" ] && echo -n "Starting $DESC: "

conffiles="$(ls /etc/shaper)"
if [ -z "$conffiles" ]; then
    echo "no configuration files found in /etc/shaper/."
    exit 0
fi

### Probe QoS modules (start only)
### Ignore errors from this, because the user might have these compiled
### into the kernel. We'll see problems later if they're really missing.
if [ -x "$MP" ] && [ -e /proc/modules ]; then
   for module in $CBQ_PROBE; do
      #$MP $module || cbq_failure "failed to load module $module"
      "$MP" $module 2>&1 | grep -v "Can't locate module" >&2
   done
fi

### If we are in compile/nocache/logging mode, don't bother with cache
if [ "$1" != "compile" -a "$2" != "nocache" -a -z "$CBQ_DEBUG" ]; then
   VALID=1

   ### validate the cache
   [ "$2" = "invalidate" -o ! -f $CBQ_CACHE ] && VALID=0
   if [ $VALID -eq 1 ]; then
      [ `find $CBQ_PATH -maxdepth 1 -newer $CBQ_CACHE| \
        wc -l` -gt 0 ] && VALID=0
   fi

   ### compile the config if the cache is invalid
   if [ $VALID -ne 1 ]; then
      $0 compile > $CBQ_CACHE ||
         cbq_fail_off "failed to compile CBQ configuration!"
   fi

   ### run the cached commands
   exec /bin/sh $CBQ_CACHE
fi

### Load DEVICES, DEVFIELDS and CLASSLIST
cbq_init $CBQ_PATH


### Setup root qdisc on all configured devices
for dev in $DEVICES; do
   ### Retrieve device bandwidth and, optionally, weight
   DEVTEMP=`echo "$DEVFIELDS"| sed -n "/^$dev,/ { s/$dev,//; p; q; }"`
   DEVBWDT=${DEVTEMP%%,*};   DEVWGHT=${DEVTEMP##*,}
   [ "$DEVBWDT" = "$DEVWGHT" ] && DEVWGHT=""

   ### Device bandwidth is required
   if [ -z "$DEVBWDT" ]; then
      cbq_message "could not determine bandwidth for device $dev!"
      cbq_failure "please set up the DEVICE fields properly!"
   fi

   ### Check if the device is there
   ip link show $dev &> /dev/null ||
      cbq_fail_off "device $dev not found!"

   ### Remove old root qdisc from device
   cbq_device_off $dev


   ### Setup root qdisc + class for device
   tc qdisc add dev $dev root handle 1 cbq \
   bandwidth $DEVBWDT avpkt 1000 cell 8

   ### Set weight of the root class if set
   [ -n "$DEVWGHT" ] &&
      tc class change dev $dev root cbq weight $DEVWGHT allot 1514

   [ "$1" = "compile" ] && echo
done # dev


### Setup traffic classes
for classfile in $CLASSLIST; do
   cbq_load_class $CBQ_PATH $classfile

   ### Create the class
   tc class add dev $DEVICE parent 1:$PARENT classid 1:$CLASS cbq \
   bandwidth $BANDWIDTH rate $RATE weight $WEIGHT prio $PRIO \
   allot 1514 cell 8 maxburst 20 avpkt 1000 $BOUNDED $ISOLATED ||
      cbq_fail_off "failed to add class $CLASS with parent $PARENT on $DEVICE!"

   ### Create leaf qdisc if set
   if [ "$LEAF" = "tbf" ]; then
      tc qdisc add dev $DEVICE parent 1:$CLASS handle $CLASS tbf \
      rate $RATE buffer $BUFFER limit $LIMIT mtu $MTU $PEAK
   elif [ "$LEAF" = "sfq" ]; then
      tc qdisc add dev $DEVICE parent 1:$CLASS handle $CLASS sfq \
      $PERTURB $QUANTUM
   fi


   ### Create fw filter for MARK fields
   for mark in `echo "$CFILE"| sed -n '/^MARK/ { s/.*=//; p; }'`; do
      ### Attach fw filter to root class
      tc filter add dev $DEVICE parent 1:0 protocol ip \
      prio $PRIO_MARK handle $mark fw classid 1:$CLASS
   done ### mark

   ### Create route filter for REALM fields
   for realm in `echo "$CFILE"| sed -n '/^REALM/ { s/.*=//; p; }'`; do
      ### Split realm into source & destination realms
      SREALM=${realm%%,*}; DREALM=${realm##*,}
      [ "$SREALM" = "$DREALM" ] && SREALM=""

      ### Convert asterisks to empty strings
      SREALM=${SREALM#\*}; DREALM=${DREALM#\*}

      ### Attach route filter to the root class
      tc filter add dev $DEVICE parent 1:0 protocol ip \
      prio $PRIO_REALM route ${SREALM:+from $SREALM} \
      ${DREALM:+to $DREALM} classid 1:$CLASS
   done ### realm

   ### Create u32 filter for RULE fields
   for rule in `echo "$CFILE"| sed -n '/^RULE/ { s/.*=//; p; }'`; do
      ### Split rule into source & destination
      SRC=${rule%%,*}; DST=${rule##*,}
      [ "$SRC" = "$rule" ] && SRC=""


      ### Split destination into address, port & mask fields
      DADDR=${DST%%:*}; DTEMP=${DST##*:}
      [ "$DADDR" = "$DST" ] && DTEMP=""

      DPORT=${DTEMP%%/*}; DMASK=${DTEMP##*/}
      [ "$DPORT" = "$DTEMP" ] && DMASK="0xffff"


      ### Split up source (if specified)
      SADDR=""; SPORT=""
      if [ -n "$SRC" ]; then
         SADDR=${SRC%%:*}; STEMP=${SRC##*:}
         [ "$SADDR" = "$SRC" ] && STEMP=""

         SPORT=${STEMP%%/*}; SMASK=${STEMP##*/}
         [ "$SPORT" = "$STEMP" ] && SMASK="0xffff"
      fi


      ### Convert asterisks to empty strings
      SADDR=${SADDR#\*}; DADDR=${DADDR#\*}

      ### Compose u32 filter rules
      u32_s="${SPORT:+match ip sport $SPORT $SMASK}"
      u32_s="${SADDR:+match ip src $SADDR} $u32_s"
      u32_d="${DPORT:+match ip dport $DPORT $DMASK}"
      u32_d="${DADDR:+match ip dst $DADDR} $u32_d"

      ### Uncomment the following if you want to see parsed rules
      #echo "$rule: $u32_s $u32_d"

      ### Attach u32 filter to the appropriate class
      tc filter add dev $DEVICE parent 1:0 protocol ip \
      prio $PRIO_RULE u32 $u32_s $u32_d classid 1:$CLASS
   done ### rule

   [ "$1" = "compile" ] && echo
done ### classfile

if [ "$1" = "start" ]; then
   echo "shaper."
else # compile
   echo 'echo "shaper."'
fi

;;


#############################################################################
################################# TIME CHECK ################################
#############################################################################

timecheck)

### Get time + weekday
TIME_TMP=`date +%w/%k:%M`
TIME_DOW=${TIME_TMP%%/*}
TIME_NOW=${TIME_TMP##*/}

### Load DEVICES, DEVFIELDS and CLASSLIST
cbq_init $CBQ_PATH quiet

### Run through all classes
for classfile in $CLASSLIST; do
   ### Gather all TIME rules from class config
   TIMESET=`sed -n 's/#.*//; s/[[:space:]]//g; /^TIME/ { s/.*=//; p; }' \
      $CBQ_PATH/$classfile`
   [ -z "$TIMESET" ] && continue

   MATCH=0; CHANGE=0
   for timerule in $TIMESET; do
      TIME_ABS=`cbq_time2abs $TIME_NOW`
      
      ### Split TIME rule to pieces
      TIMESPEC=${timerule%%;*}; PARAMS=${timerule##*;}
      WEEKDAYS=${TIMESPEC%%/*}; INTERVAL=${TIMESPEC##*/}
      BEG_TIME=${INTERVAL%%-*}; END_TIME=${INTERVAL##*-}

      ### Check the day-of-week (if present)
      [ "$WEEKDAYS" != "$INTERVAL" -a \
        -n "${WEEKDAYS##*$TIME_DOW*}" ] && continue

      ### Compute interval boundaries
      BEG_ABS=`cbq_time2abs $BEG_TIME`
      END_ABS=`cbq_time2abs $END_TIME`

      ### Midnight wrap fixup
      if [ $BEG_ABS -gt $END_ABS ]; then
         [ $TIME_ABS -le $END_ABS ] &&
            TIME_ABS=$[TIME_ABS + 24*60]

         END_ABS=$[END_ABS + 24*60]
      fi

      ### If the time matches, remember params and set MATCH flag
      if [ $TIME_ABS -ge $BEG_ABS -a $TIME_ABS -lt $END_ABS ]; then
         TMP_RATE=${PARAMS%%/*}; PARAMS=${PARAMS#*/}
         TMP_WGHT=${PARAMS%%/*}; TMP_PEAK=${PARAMS##*/}

         [ "$TMP_PEAK" = "$TMP_WGHT" ] && TMP_PEAK=""
         TMP_PEAK=${TMP_PEAK:+peakrate $TMP_PEAK}

         MATCH=1
      fi
   done ### timerule


   cbq_load_class $CBQ_PATH $classfile

   ### Get current RATE of CBQ class
   RATE_NOW=`tc class show dev $DEVICE| sed -n \
       "/cbq 1:$CLASS / { s/.*rate //; s/ .*//; p; q; }"`
   [ -z "$RATE_NOW" ] && continue

   ### Time interval matched
   if [ $MATCH -ne 0 ]; then

      ### Check if there is any change in class RATE
      if [ "$RATE_NOW" != "$TMP_RATE" ]; then
         NEW_RATE="$TMP_RATE"
         NEW_WGHT="$TMP_WGHT"
         NEW_PEAK="$TMP_PEAK"
         CHANGE=1
      fi

   ### Match not found, reset to default RATE if necessary
   elif [ "$RATE_NOW" != "$RATE" ]; then
      NEW_WGHT="$WEIGHT"
      NEW_RATE="$RATE"
      NEW_PEAK="$PEAK"
      CHANGE=1
   fi

   ### If there are no changes, go for next class
   [ $CHANGE -eq 0 ] && continue

   ### Replace CBQ class
   tc class replace dev $DEVICE classid 1:$CLASS cbq \
   bandwidth $BANDWIDTH rate $NEW_RATE weight $NEW_WGHT prio $PRIO \
   allot 1514 cell 8 maxburst 20 avpkt 1000 $BOUNDED $ISOLATED

   ### Replace leaf qdisc (if any)
   if [ "$LEAF" = "tbf" ]; then
      tc qdisc replace dev $DEVICE handle $CLASS tbf \
      rate $NEW_RATE buffer $BUFFER limit $LIMIT mtu $MTU $NEW_PEAK
   fi

   cbq_message "$TIME_NOW: class $CLASS on $DEVICE changed rate ($RATE_NOW -> $NEW_RATE)"
done ### class file
;;


#############################################################################
################################## THE REST #################################
#############################################################################

stop)
   echo -n "Stopping $DESC: "
   cbq_off
   echo "shaper."
;;

list)
   cbq_show
;;

stats)
   cbq_show -s
;;

restart|force-reload)
   shift
   $0 stop
   $0 start "$@"
;;

*)
   echo "Usage: `basename $0` {start|compile|stop|restart|force-reload|timecheck|list|stats}"
esac

exit 0
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p3tzata_

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Shaper
« Отговор #3 -: Mar 18, 2008, 18:09 »
Името на файла трябва да във формат

cbq-0002.My_first_shaper

cbq-0003.My_first_shaper

cbq-0004.My_first_shaper

и да са разположени в папката /etc/shaper



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bashi1

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Shaper
« Отговор #4 -: Mar 18, 2008, 18:19 »
Пак се появи проблем:
Примерен код
root@bashi-desktop:/etc/shaper# /etc/init.d/shaper start
Starting CBQ traffic shaping: find: warning: you have specified the -maxdepth option after a non-option argument (, but options are not positional (-maxdepth affects tests specified before it as well as those specified after it).  Please specify options before other arguments.

find: warning: you have specified the -maxdepth option after a non-option argument (, but options are not positional (-maxdepth affects tests specified before it as well as those specified after it).  Please specify options before other arguments.

RTNETLINK answers: No such file or directory
shaper.

След това име сложих и едно .shaper и уж стана. Пуснах пинг от второто PC и той стигна за около 1500 ms но после се оправи и тръгна нормално. Като отварям сайтовете за сега ги отваря много бавно но не знам дали ще работи и за в бъдеще. Другия ми въпрос е има ли начин към тази мрежа 10.0.0.0 да се сложи друго ограничение понеже тя е локална и доста бърза?



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p3tzata_

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Shaper
« Отговор #5 -: Mar 19, 2008, 09:38 »
Kak няма да ти бави като си го направил да ти ограничава на 28Кbit/s
ако теглиш нещо при това ограничение и в същия момент пуснеш пинг не 1500 ms, а 4 секунди време ще ти покаже
Четете малко преди да започнете да правите нещо
Прочети ги малко тези закоментиранете редове във файла /etc/init.d/shaper

Така по въпроса за 10-та мрежа според мен може да стане така (ако някъде греша сигурно ще ме поправят пичовете)

Твоя рутер трябва да има 2 вътрешни интерфейса с IP:
192.168.1.1 и 192.168.10.1 така клиента ти също трябва да има 2 IP-та пример 192.168.1.5 и 192.168.10.5

На рутера правиш път до 10.0.0.0 САМО от мрежа 192.168.10.0/24
а към интернета правиш път само от мрежа 192.168.1.0/24
И съответно налагаш по-голямо ограничените на 192.168.10.5 и по-малко ограничение на 192.168.1.5
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bashi1

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Shaper
« Отговор #6 -: Mar 19, 2008, 15:52 »
И аз така си мислех, обаче е малко неудобно, защото двете мрежи се ползват едновременно.



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