On Saturday 10 May 2003 02:23, John McCain wrote:> Referencing the cbq wondershaper as a discussion example, let me ask a
> stupid question with regard to how the rules actually work and what they
> actually do.
>
> "Prio" is discussed in the howto as a qdisc, but in the
wondershaper, it
> appears to be a cbq parameter rather than a qdisc in its own right. My
> question is this:
You have the prio qdisc that can be used to transmit packets.
But you also have the prio option that can be used if you add a class or a
filter. For the filters, it detemines the order the filters are checked.
For the classes, it depends. For a htb class, it determines the latency and
the borrowing scheme of the class. I''m not sure what it does for a cbq
class, but I think the packets of the lowest prio cbq class or sended first.
> If the outgoing queue is full of traffic identified as "traffic we
hate",
> or 1:30 at prio 2, what exactly is the behavior of the system for a ping
> packet, for example, which should classify as 1:10 at prio 1? Does the
> ping packet bypass the 1:30 line, because it''s prio is lower?
(discounting
> stochastic fairness behavior)
>
> If, as is the case with 1:20 and 1:30 in the wondershaper, the prio is
> identical but bandwidth is different, how exactly does the system behave?
> Will it look at every outbound packet in the queue, make a bandwidth
> decision, and then either send the packet or skip it? Let''s
assume the
> example as above - a queue full of 1:30 traffic, and here comes a 1:20
> packet. I''m guessing the kernel is cycling through each 1:30
packet and
> deciding not to forward it yet, then coming to the 1:20 packet, and
> forwarding it because 1:20''s bandwidth is higher.
>
> As I understand it, if we were to analogize this process with a line (queue
> for our UK friends) at a resturaunt, for example, the first situation, with
> two different prios, would take the form of two differnt lines, such that
> (again, discounting sfq for the purposes of discussion) no one in the prio
> 2 line could be seated if anyone was standing in the prio 1 line.
>
> The second situation, with the same prio level for each queue, would be
> represented by a single line, but where the matre''d asks the first
person a
> question to determine their queue class, finds that the resturaunt is at
> its maximum level for that type of "customer", then moves on to
the second
> in line and so on until reaching the 1:20 "customer", who then is
removed
> from the back of the line and seated.
>
> Is this the meaning of "prio" in the wondershaper? If not,
what''s really
> happening?
Stef
--
stef.coene@docum.org
"Using Linux as bandwidth manager"
http://www.docum.org/
#lartc @ irc.oftc.net
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