Cisco Switches :: To Do Bandwidth Limiting By IP Address Sg 300
Apr 13, 2011
I have a SG 300-20 small business switch and I would like to restrict bandwidth by gateway ip address but not by physical port or LAG. On the web interface, I can only do bw limiting per port or lag. I want to do bandwidth limiting by the IP addresses that I assign to vlans that my hosts use as a gateway ip.
I live in rural Alaska and use satellite internet with 1.5mbps rate and 4gb rolling weekly download limit. I was wondering if there are any wireless routers I can buy that I can set a bandwidth limit for the specific router. Due to teenage girls in the house we hit the weekly limit in a day or two because of all the music videos and such that they watch on you tube, it is annoying getting limited to the 256kbps download rate so often.
I am a gamer living in my apartment with a room mate who loves to download music 24/7 and a girlfriend who loves to watch netflix. Needless to say, every time I go to play a video game I get shitty ping and lots of lag. From what I've gathered, DD-WRT's QOS is ****, and Tomato is the way to go in 3rd party firmware.
Without using another box as a router preferably. My Cisco Linksys router doesn't have any options for this but I heard you could possibly install some 3rd party firmware to get around that. This would be a last resort for me What I'm hoping for his some piece of software that could do this
We have two Cisco 2811 Routers setup with a GRE tunnel that we would like to constrain the bandwidth on to replicate a satellite connectinon of 400 kbits. We tried the bandwidth command 400, but from what I understand that is only for routing metrics and not actual speed of the interface.
I have a Cisco ASA5510 with two Cisco Catalyst 3560G switches plugged into it. Then I have 2 Cisco1400 Aironet WAPs plugged into the switches.
My goal is to limit incoming bandwith for two specific vlans. So users who are plugged into the switch or connected to the wifi can't go bandwidth crazy.
The rule I currently have setup on the ASA5510 is limiting internal bandwidth, I know shame on me.
So how do I setup a rule on the ASA5510 that will limit users external traffic on vlans without limit internal lan traffic?
I have an RV220W which I would like to set bandwidth limiting on. When we upload files to yousendit or an FTP server, it saturates the connection and essentially stops any other traffic until the upload is finished. Looking at the manual, it looks like it should do this, but does not seem clear to me.
I run a business and have customers who would like to use my wireless internet. I previously had a completely open network that I would allow them to use, until someone illegally downloaded a movie and got us in trouble. I would like to allow use of the network again, but limit activities like this. Basically, so they could only do basic web browsing, etc.
how to limit bandwidth only for user account in window 7...My PC has 2 account ..one is admin and other is user ..i need to limit the bandwidth only for user account ,do I need a software for this.
I will have this one router. Its f0/0 will be for the Internet connection with bandwidth of 30Mbps. Its f0/1 will be connected to a switch for internal networks. This link will be separated to 3 VLANs for 3 internal networks. I'm wondering if there is a way to gurantee 10Mbps for each VLAN but allow use up to 30Mbps when another two VLANs are not using any Internet bandwidth? I only worry about download bandwidth from internet.The 3 internal networks will all have public IPs and they belong to their own subnets. There won't be NAT/PAT.
We have a new 100MB internet service, but we only pay for 10MB and above that is a per/MB fee and not cheap. I want to limit all traffic inbound and outbound only to use up to 10MB on the outside interface of our Cisco 3825.
I have a 4500 and 6500 that I'd like to be able to limit the bandwidth of layer 2 switchports. So for instance I have all GB blades but certain servers I'd like only to have connections of about 5 Mb per second or 15 Mb per second etc.
So my ISP (Telus) recently replaced our old router with a ZyXEL VSG1432. I'm currently having a huge lag issue when my roommates laptop is connected to our network. He is connected via wireless, I'm wired. So I did some searching around and I think i can solve this by limiting his bandwidth with QoS settings. I'm getting conflicting information here though. After logging into the router there are no QoS options yet according to ZyXEL's website url...This router should have the settings available. Is it possible that Telus does something to remove this feature? Is there some not so obvious way to enable QoS? Is there some other way to limit the bandwidth?
I currently use Verizon FiOS 20/5. The speed has been great until the day my cousin and his parents moved in. They also use our FiOS connection and I have came to the conclusion that my cousin's laptop is eating away all of the bandwidth which makes all devices using FiOS have extremely slow internet speeds. I know it is his computer because I logged in as admin to the Verizon FiOS page (192.168.1.1) and I saw that he is using several P2P applications and downloading torrents as well. Is there a way I can limit the bandwidth he is using so that the internet speed can improve? I looked at the QoS tab and tried to play around with the settings, but I don't want to mess it up. The router I have is Actiontec M1424-WR (Verizon FiOS 20 Down/5 Up). A lot of sources I am reading says that I have to use the QoS, but I don't know how to use it on the site.
My QA team needs to test number of special connectivity scenarios where their wireless connection has a limited bandwidth.Ideally, I would like to provide them number of SSIDs each of which has different bandwidth limitation.But so far I did not find a way to apply any bandwidth limitations to my 2504 Wireless controller and the 3602E AP.QoS has only 4 pre-defined modes which can't be set to a specific limit.
Can I limit bandwith for guest in a wlan network with out Wlan controller? and of course, how can I do it?P.S.: I heard something about bronze profile in a wlan controller envoiroment, I need something like that but in an independent AP.
I am trying to limit HTTP access to my server on the local network to a specific IP address. I create an Access Rule in the firewall section, however that doesn't work. The only way it works is if I add the internal IP address of the server to the Forwarding section where I create a new HTTP forwarding rule.However, that is not good because that allows ALL HTTP traffic to that server instead of just by the single IP address.
I just wonder if there is simply way on Cisco 800 to set bandwidth priority for internal IP address. Basically I have server and would like to make sure, whatever comes to it or goes out has the highest priority and users won’t kill bandwidth for the server connection.
Been looking around in my routers settings for something that even comes close to limiting bandwidth on a specific port, or mac address, but the only thing I can find is priority settings like "Low, Normal, High, and Highest" I did however see this:
I am not 100% sure if I can specifically set bandwidth limit per port or mac address, cause I don't see an option to do that, so I presume it just limits the whole network as one...
I have got a very basic/fundamental doubt.I would like to know how a bandwidth gets distributed in switches.for example consider a scenario where i have a coreswitch A and coreswitch B connected between each other througha a 1Giga Fiber now each of my core switche are connected to two edge switches through fiber links. all edge switches have giga ports. now if i connect a pc with giga link in th edge switch of coreswitch A and tansfer a file to a PC connnected to the edge switch in network B.how does the switch allocate/distribute bandwidth?
We will shortly be installing a Cisco 3825 router, to be connected to the BTNet service, over fibre.We will be binding many public IP addresses to the router.
Is there a way of defining a specific bandwidth limit per IP address, or range?
Just put in an SF302-08P switch with two AP541N's. Just a Comcast modem connects into the switch along with the two WAPs, nothing else. Speedtest through the cable modem with nothing plugged into it is 48Mbps. Then connecting a single laptop via the switch shows a speedtest of 33Mbps. Then with the two AP541N's plugged in and using the same laptop over WiFi, I'd consistently seen 10Mbps for downloading. But going right back to the cable modem directly showed me close to 50Mbps in a speed test.
Have factory defaults in all the Cisco devices, and poured over the settings and it looks like bandwidth limiting is disabled. Suspecting maybe it is for QoS and to optimize voice, but I see definite places in the devices where I could designate optimizing voice and those aren't enabled. Then started thinking with tweaking the wireless frequencies, but didn't want to do anything too unstable.
Does the SGE2000 supports NetFlow? I've checked the Cisco docs and also called Cisco support to which no one has been able to answer me.
Anyhow, just in case it doesn't support NetFlow, how to be able to set up something that would be able to check the bandwidth usage on each port?
I've got a problem where I think the SGE2000 switch is failing when I pump around 190~200Mbps through x2 of the ports (Server A on port 1=130Mbps and Server B on port 2=60Mbps) of Multicast traffic (UDP). I can measure the output from the Streaming servers that provide the multicast content, thats how I know the input to the switch and I know that there are no packets lost or any errors departing from the servers, yet when I increase server B to say 80Mbps, I get break up and all sorts of problems on the client end STBs and it is happening on the multicast content provided by Server A too which is a different source, so I'm 99.9% sure its a SGE2000 switch problem which is why I'd like to monitor it somehow.
would like to know how a bandwidth gets distributed in switches.for example consider a scenariowhere i have a coreswitch A and coreswitch B connected between each other througha a 1Giga Fiber, now each of my core switche are connected to two edge switches through fiber links. all edge switches have giga ports. now if i connect a pc with giga link in th edge switch of coreswitch A and tansfer a file to a PC connnected to the edge switch in network B.. how much bandwidth would i get?how does the switch allocate bandwidth?
I have a cisco Swtich SGH 300-20 Gigabit switch i configure 2 vlan one is default and one is vlan 10
Vlan 1 ip range 172.16.0.0/23 Vlan 10 ip range 172.16.2.0/24
Client on Vlan getting Proper IP from DHCP Server all i need is to distribute internet bandwidth we have 6/3 mb and i want to give 4/2 mb to vlan 1 and 2/1 mb to Vlan 10
Int Gi16 on switch is configured as trunk port and is connected to cisco 2811 router
what are the command used to distribute bandwidth between these 2 vlans
I am using using 2 broadband with tp-link dual wan router 10 pc using the broadband.does any one know about the router who controls bandwith there is option available in Tp-Link Dual wan router but its not working...is there any router which automatically takes bandwith and allow as per my details.
I'd like to use an SG200 swicth to allocate bandwidth on a 100 Mbps fiber Internet uplink.I will have 5 routers (each supporting a separate network) connected to the SG200, and I'd like to give each network 20 Mbps. QOS configuration, best CIR and CBS settings for this.
We have 1 mpbs bandwidth line, but most of the time we are getting only 300-500 kpbs download speed, i want to send statistics report to our ISP, what will be best procedure to test the bandwidth report, i have checked in some websites like bandwidthplace and speedtest but these sites are not accurate, how to check the actual bandwidth we getting from ISP against 1 Mbps. We have solarwinds monitoring tool in this i have configured the WAN interface for 1 mbps