Marcelo Celleri <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi everyone,
>
> I'm working with ALTQ, but I realize that the borrow option in cbq
> queues doesn't work at least like the manual says "A child class can
> borrow bandwidth from its parent class as long as excess bandwidth is
> available"
You are not
On Thu, 2007-02-08 at 10:25 +0100, Marko Lerota wrote:
> Marcelo Celleri <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > Hi everyone,
> >
> > I'm working with ALTQ, but I realize that the borrow option in cbq
> > queues doesn't work at least like the manual says "A child class can
> > borrow bandwidth from its
Muhammad Reza <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> but it's work fine with OpenBSD
Yes, and the ethernet devices also work better, but I will
stay on FreeBSD ;)
--
One cannot sell the earth upon which the people walk
Tacunka Witco
_
At 08:15 AM 2/8/2007, Marko Lerota wrote:
Muhammad Reza <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> but it's work fine with OpenBSD
Yes, and the ethernet devices also work better, but I will
stay on FreeBSD ;)
Really ? Which drivers ? I found bge and em to be less supported and
slower than on FreeBSD.
Thanks for your answers, but like I said I cannot switch to hfsc where I
have the main configuration for my customers, because I have a lot of
queues and the server gives me:
pfctl: DIOCADDALTQ: Cannot allocate memory
I don't know if something could be wrong in my config or is just the
amount of
Mike Tancsa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Really ? Which drivers ? I found bge and em to be less supported and
> slower than on FreeBSD.
There are some issues with bge and em drivers (kernel panics and timeouts).
You have complete discussion on freebsd-stable mailing list.
--
One cannot sell t
I think that the number of queues is bigger than 64, so I have to change
this value in the kernel config and then recompile it? Is there another
way to do it? I'm scared to death only with the idea of recompiling in
my production server :(
On jue, 2007-02-08 at 10:19 -0500, Scott Ullrich wrote:
At 09:52 AM 2/8/2007, Marko Lerota wrote:
Mike Tancsa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Really ? Which drivers ? I found bge and em to be less supported and
> slower than on FreeBSD.
There are some issues with bge and em drivers (kernel panics and timeouts).
You have complete discussion on freebsd
Tom Judge wrote:
Hi,
I am having some problems getting policy routing of outbound ESP packets
to work correctly. It seems the routing works fine for everything but
esp packets. Is this a known bug?
Tom
Relevent PF rules:
table { 100.198.71.78 , 100.198.71.66 }
pass out quick route-to
On Thursday 08 February 2007 15:52, Marko Lerota wrote:
> Mike Tancsa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > Really ? Which drivers ? I found bge and em to be less supported and
> > slower than on FreeBSD.
>
> There are some issues with bge and em drivers (kernel panics and
> timeouts). You have complete
Quoting Volker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
On 12/23/-58 20:59, ;048<8@ 0?CAB8= wrote:
2. If i have some malware on my PC and use mail-client program. If
I send the same message some times I automatically get into
WHITE-list and my malware can spam as much as it must?
Not really related to your
Thanks a lot for all your answers, I will try changing to 512 hfsc
classes and we'll see what happens...
On jue, 2007-02-08 at 10:48 -0500, Scott Ullrich wrote:
> I believe that is the only way. HFSC queues do not scale linearly due
> to the algorithm in use or something or another.. :)
>
> g
>> Nothing unusual, but that the mail stops forwarding from the
>> whitelist. i.e. the sender resends the mail, gets in WHITE-list in
>> spamd, but the mail does not actually pass the router.
>
>That and the sheer size of your spamdb is weird.
>
I have about 1000 users behind each router, and
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