I have a roommate who takes up a lot of bandwidth from the internet. I am allowing him to use my router which is a Linksys E2500. Is there anyway to limit how much bandwidth he can actually use.
I want to know how I can manually limit the Kbps for a particular devince in the QOS.I DO NOT want to simply set the priority (low/med/high). I want to "physically" limit a device.
When I select to do it manually (upstream bandwidth) it limits ALL devices and I do not want this. I want to limit the bandwidth on only one device that is connected (ie an Xbox)
I currently use a E2500 router for my home network. I have setup the Wireless guest Network for my downstairs Tenant while he is out of work so he can still have some internet. The problem however is that often the guest network will take up 90% of my 55mb/sec bandwidth, leaving none for the primary network. Is there a way for me to Throttle the amount of bandwidth the Guest network can use? Say alot 10mb/sec for Guest access only, and leave the rest for our main network?
How can I limit bandwidth speed of guest accounts? Or are there free softwares available to do something like that? It's kinda like the hotspot softwares - where we can set hourly, daily, monthly allowances and see a report on their connectivity.
I am planning to buy a router for my hotel and I would like to know is it possible to limit the bandwidth limit to the guests? And the admin computer can utilize the maximum speed? it it possible to create a login page paper when some one enters my wifi connection?
I am a Network admin of 200 Computers.Most of our users used to download movies through torrents.I just want to now how can i limit the bandwidth for specific user for both domain and work group user
Is there a way to limit a whole PC windows XP, or a certain program to use only a certain about of your total internet connection bandwidth?For example, I have 5 PCs in home all one the same ISP connection. I have one PC that I am trying to backup files online but I can only run it at certain times due to the backup program using ALL upload/download speed. And that makes every other PC super slow.
I want to switch to a slower ISP because of financial constraints (specifically downgrade from cable to DSL), so I'd like to set up my Windows XP computer so that it downloads and uploads at the same speed that the slower ISP does. That way I can kind of "try before I buy" for a week or so, to get an idea if I can live with the slower speed before disconnecting from cable and incurring a disconnect charge. I was told that some software that limits your bandwidth also may cause distortion in video or audio streams, so I'd like to avoid that.
My router is a GT704-WG running on the default firmware. I need to limit a certain computer's bandwidth. Am I able to set the maximum download/upload speed for a certain computer via the router control panel (192.168.1.1)?
On my home network I have 11 devices connected.Is there a way I can give each device a certain bandwidth limit so my Internet doesn't keep getting sucked up?
I am using ASA 5505 cisco firewall as a transparent firewall. I have assigned ethernet 0/0 as outside interface and ethernet0/1-7 as inside interface. There are 3 departments in office. So, i connected ethernet 0/1 to Dept A, ethernet 0/2 to Dept B and ethernet 0/3 to Dept C. Now, I want to limit bandwidth to each department, e.g, 1 Mbps download/upload to Dept A, 512 kbps download/upload to Dept B and 512 kbps download/upload to Dept C. So, how can i do this in ASA 5505.?
I currently have a 20mb connection with sky. I have 4 computers in my household and using the wireless modem router to distribute the connection.can I limit each computer to a certain amount of bandwidth. (eg PC1 =5mb, PC2=5mb, PC3=5mb, PC4=5mb) Two of my computers are running Win Vista HP and two computers are running Win 7 Pro & Ultimate.
If two (one 6509A 9/26 with server A located in A end, 6509B with serverB located in B End) which is connected via a 1G link. If there is serverA send 700M file to server B via a 1G link. If I configured below command to 6509A 9/26, can I limit the bandwidth of server on bothincoming and outgoing to 500M?
class-map match-all FROM-SERVERmatch access-group name FROM-SERVER!policy-map FROM-SERVERclass FROM-SERVERpolice 500000000 conform-action transmit exceed-action drop!interface GigabitEthernet9/26service-policy in FROM-SERVER
I have a 3845 Router with three connected interfaces, one to my WAN, one to my LAN and another to my wifi zone. I want to limit the amount of WAN bandwidth the WIFI zone can take to say a max of one third and not restrict WAN bandwidth from the LAN at all.
I have cisco 7600 core router in ISP , i want to put the bandwidth limit on it for outgoing traffic (for internet) on a subnet because i am using Bluecoat and i want to test my bluecoat.On this subnet i have no limit for bluecoat but after the bluecoat i want to limit it. On 7600 cisco router i have not rate limit command so how it can be possible for a perticular subnet ?
I have a 20MB internet connection, with a 100GB cap. My mother works at home, with some employees. Adding home and work, 8 people use the internet all the time. Lots of Youtube videos, streaming netflix, iTunes downloading, and so on.I wanted something to:
1) Manage this cap. It's over too soon, and we're left with a poor internet connection until the end of the month - like 500kb.
2) Something to manage two internet connections.
I was thinking about a dedicated router - I currently use a WRT54G V8, which is nice, but it has some issues handling the traffic when the internet is in its full glory. I heard about pfSense, and some searches on Google tell me it's possible to do both options using it.
VLAN ===> FE 0/1 {With subinterfaces - ALL INSIDE LAN INTERFACES} ==> ROUTER ===> BVI 0/1 {WAN Interface - OUTSIDE}
i am doing NAT for my clients in LAN to WAN - Static NAT i want one of my client who is excessing some service with his Public IP to get a specific amount of bandwidth ... as right now he is hogging all the bandwidth .i have 1841 router.
Anyway, I have a cable connection with a modem and a D-Link wireless router. Some of the users are abusing the bandwidth, making it difficult for others to surf the net.What's the easiest way to set a bandwidth limit for each user? Also, it is possible to do it through the router as I don't want to keep my computer running the whole time?
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...
The rest of us use wifi for our internet services but this isn't good enough for are newest member so they have now connected a cable directly into the modem, so now whenever he is online ALL wifi suffers dramatically! What can i do to limit his bandwidth and allow the wifi to gain more access is there a way to limit via his MAC address or IP address?
I own a cyber cafe. I was told that switches are smart enough to distribute the same speed to all the clients. So I was not worried at first. But now if 2-3 customers starts watching youtube videos the rest starts complaining about the speed. I googled for the solution but got none. How to limit the speed,I want to lock the bandwidth of each computer.
I just purchased a 100M fiber line to go with a brand new D-Link DIR-655 router. Before plugging in the router, I tested on my laptop directly from the modem and had great result speeds of 98M/97M. I connected the router, then plugged my laptop to find I was only getting speeds of about 10M/6M. This was true for both wired and wireless connections.
I took a look at the router settings. I turned off QoS, but that didn't work. One thing I did see was the WAN was set to auto. I attempted to change that to 100mbps or to 1000mpbs. However, when I did that my modem light that shows a 100M connection is active turned off and I couldn't get internet. I was only able to get a connection if I left that on auto. Is there a setting somewhere that is limiting my bandwidth from the router?I reset the router twice and checked to find I had the latest firmware. Is there something that I am missing? I have always been a Linksys fan, but wanted to see how D-Link is.
The Nordic World Ski Championships 2011 is upon us, and NRK, the national broadcaster of Norway, is offering HD streaming via the Akamai network.I run a network with 5000 users. Our internet bandwidth is usually 300mbps, but we've increased it to 500mbps for the duration of the Ski Championship. that did not work, because of the HD streaming.The internet link is delivered on a fiber trunk with many other VLANs, and my first piece of equipment in the chain is a Cisco 3560G (C3560-IPBASEK9-M), Version 12.2(46)SE). A port on the 3560G is then set to switchport access vlan "internet-vlan", and that port is connected to a routed port on my Cisco 6509-Sup720-10G ( (s72033_rp-ADVIPSERVICESK9_WAN-M), Version 12.2(33)SXH3a). The 6500 then routes the traffic to a Cisco ASA 5520 (running 8.2(4)).What I'd like to do, is to limit the total bandwidth of all conversations between our IPs and the nearest Akamai IP-range, which is 195.18.221.128/25.How can I achieve that? I've tried to read the QoS chapter from the manual of the 3560G 12.2(46), but QoS is very complex stuff?
We have a Cisco 3845 router and on the G0/0 interface we have our public switch with multiple public IP addresses (servers, routers, etc..) and on the S0/0 interface we have a DS3 Internet connection. I need to limit the bandwidth from the Internet (download) to one of the IP addresses on the G0/0 interface. I'm thinking of limiting to 256K and really need info with either a policy map or something equivalent.
we have a bandwidth pipe terminating on 1841 BVI interface... now we want to limit all the traffic going from inside to WAN circuit to half... for example 10 Mb pipe we want to reduce to 5 mb on bvi interface.. how this can be done .. as of not there is not need to police any specific type of traffic .. this needs to be done for any traffic from inside to outside...
So lately this week, one rogue user from the boarding house has been downloading(possibly torrenting)/streaming to his/her heart's content resulting in extremely slow connections for everyone else. I've been using an Android app to list all devices connected to the network, and one-by-one, manually disconnected each one to find the problematic, bandwidth-hogging IP. I've found that said user continued to use up bandwidth even up to the wee hours of the morning.
I managed to find his/her IP address, I know I could just block sites/ports via the router's control panel but I guess it's not that simple because: a.) Whoever setup the wireless on our floor forgot the username/password combo(not even the landlady knows) b.) I've asked management about asking for access to the router. Being the IT student on the floor, I guess I'll take the responsibility of at least limiting the rogue user's bandwidth so everyone else on our floor has a fair share.
So my question is: is there a way to limit an IP/application's bandwidth usage via a non-router control panel method, without having to do a hard reset on the router? I have tried in vain to use the Android app I used, but all it takes is a router reboot to disable it (said user knows how to reset the router). It's been days since we've had a stable connection for legitimate schoolwork usage because of this one IP that's using up all the resources.
The router on our floor is a Linksys WRT54G2 and my operating system is Windows 7 64-bit.