HUR All American 17732 Posts user info edit post |
I got a Wireless Linksys Router serving as my houses WLAN setup they I created myself. I use wireless but one of my roomate is connected via 100mbps copper directly to the router and constantly is hogging the bandwidth with his bitTorrents. Is it possible to go into my network setup in the router and limit his bandwidth?
I am getting tired of it feeling like i am on a 56 k 9/4/2008 7:05:55 PM |
Noen All American 31346 Posts user info edit post |
if your router supports QoS, or bandwidth caps by IP you can.
otherwise you need to get a router that does. 9/4/2008 7:14:29 PM |
evan All American 27701 Posts user info edit post |
depending on the model of linksys router you have, slap dd-wrt or tomato on there9/4/2008 7:57:23 PM |
YOMAMA Suspended 6218 Posts user info edit post |
^ second that 9/4/2008 8:53:50 PM |
LimpyNuts All American 16859 Posts user info edit post |
My brother just asked me this yesterday. I said DD-WRT. 9/4/2008 8:57:04 PM |
Grandmaster All American 10829 Posts user info edit post |
Tomato or dig up a p3/128MB ram and slap pfSense on it.
[Edited on September 4, 2008 at 8:59 PM. Reason : .] 9/4/2008 8:58:10 PM |
joe17669 All American 22728 Posts user info edit post |
I have dd-wrt. what makes tomato better? i always like trying new stuff out 9/4/2008 9:05:23 PM |
moron All American 34142 Posts user info edit post |
Just have him cap his upload speed in his torrent app to 1/2 to 2/3 of your max upload. That way his torrents still blaze while you can surf the web without issue. 9/4/2008 10:05:57 PM |
quagmire02 All American 44225 Posts user info edit post |
tomato FTW 9/4/2008 10:55:03 PM |
evan All American 27701 Posts user info edit post |
^^yes, but this way you can do it without him having control over it. also, capping upload speed (while helping somewhat) won't fix the problem - the majority of the data when you surf is incoming, not outgoing. the only things going out of your system are the GETs to the http server, the tcp acks, and dns queries (plus a few other things).
joe#s: tomato is cleaner and has more robust reporting/logging/graphing facilities. i've tried them both and like them both pretty much equally.
personally, i run pfSense on a p3 800mhz box w/ 512mb of ram and 3 dual-port intel gigabit server nics with a cisco aironet a/b/g card to serve a wireless ap. it's fast, works perfectly, powerful, and stable... i love it.
[Edited on September 4, 2008 at 11:05 PM. Reason : .] 9/4/2008 11:02:12 PM |
Aficionado Suspended 22518 Posts user info edit post |
exactly
and if you dont say anything, he'll never know
especially if you control bandwidth based on the service 9/4/2008 11:03:15 PM |
moron All American 34142 Posts user info edit post |
^^ Typically though people have download bw to spare, but their upload is maxxed, and this is what causes the slowdowns, because the requests struggle to get through. 9/4/2008 11:36:19 PM |
smoothcrim Universal Magnetic! 18966 Posts user info edit post |
also, the number of connections your client is set to make is a major factor. I get often triple speeds by limiting the number of connections to ~25-40 and capping upload to 25k/s 9/5/2008 8:29:27 AM |
Grandmaster All American 10829 Posts user info edit post |
I haven't ran pfSense in years. Have they released anything groundbreaking since 1.0 RC x 9/5/2008 9:17:23 AM |
RSXTypeS Suspended 12280 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "I got a Wireless Linksys Router serving as my houses WLAN setup they I created myself. I use wireless but one of my roomate is connected via 100mbps copper directly to the router and constantly is hogging the bandwidth with his bitTorrents. Is it possible to go into my network setup in the router and limit his bandwidth?" |
its probably not even the bandwidth thats killing it. He probably has so many connections per seed that its killing the router. If he cuts back his open connections he'll still get good bandwidth and your router won't feel like its taking a dump.9/5/2008 5:51:58 PM |
Charybdisjim All American 5486 Posts user info edit post |
You could always tell him that if he keeps making the network unuseable for you that he'll have to get his own damn ISP. I mean I'm assuming you've asked him to limit the number of simultaneous connections and to limit the incoming and outgoing bandwidth use. Sure you could install DD-WRT and force him to be considerate, but if someone's not willing to be basically considerate why should you have to do work to keep them from hogging shit? Scissors+ethernet cable = easy fix. 9/6/2008 4:43:37 AM |
LickHer All American 1580 Posts user info edit post |
Unplugging the ethernet cable would be an easy fix and money saving. 9/6/2008 8:14:09 AM |
Str8BacardiL ************ 41754 Posts user info edit post |
If he has Azureus he can cap them himself.
If he is too much of an ass to do that you might need to torment him until he does. 9/8/2008 12:10:45 AM |