fireqos.conf(5) | 3.1.7 | fireqos.conf(5) |
fireqos.conf - FireQOS configuration file
This file defines the traffic shaping that will be applied by fireqos(1).
The default configuration file is /etc/firehol/fireqos.conf. It can be overridden from the command line.
A configuration consists of a number of input and output interface definitions (see fireqos-interface(5)). Each interface can define any number of (optionally nested) classes (see fireqos-class(5)) which shape the traffic which they match (see fireqos-match(5)).
In FireQOS, speeds can be expressed in the following units:
Note
The default, kbit is different to tc(8) which assumes bytes per second when no unit is specified.
This example uses match statements.
# incoming traffic from my ADSL router
interface eth2 adsl-in input rate 10500kbit adsl remote pppoe-llc
class voip commit 100kbit pfifo
match udp ports 5060,10000:10100 # asterisk sip and rtp
match udp ports 16393:16402 # apple facetime
class realtime commit 10%
match tcp port 22,1195:1198,1753 # ssh, openvpn, pptp
match udp port 53 # dns
match proto GRE
match icmp
match tcp syn
match tcp ack
class clients commit 10%
match tcp port 20,21,25,80,143,443,465,873,993 # mail, web, ftp, etc
# unmatched traffic goes here ('default' is a special name)
class default max 90%
# I define torrents beneath the default class, so they slow
# down when the default class is willing to get bandwidth
class torrents max 90%
match port 51414 # my torrent client
# outgoing traffic to my ADSL router
interface eth2 adsl-out output rate 800kbit adsl remote pppoe-llc
class voip commit 100kbit pfifo
match udp ports 5060,10000:10100 # asterisk sip and rtp
match udp ports 16393:16402 # apple facetime
class realtime commit 10%
match tcp port 22,1195:1198,1753 # ssh, openvpn, pptp
match udp port 53 # dns
match proto GRE
match icmp
match tcp syn
match tcp ack
class clients commit 10%
match tcp port 20,21,25,80,143,443,465,873,993 # mail, web, ftp, etc
# unmatched traffic goes here ('default' is a special name)
class default max 90%
# I define torrents beneath the default class, so they slow
# down when the default class is willing to get bandwidth
class torrents max 90%
match port 51414 # my torrent client
This example uses server/client statements in a bidirectional interface. Of course match statements can also be specified. FireQOS will create 2 interfaces out of this: world-in and world-out.
DEVICE=dsl0
INPUT_SPEED="12000kbit"
OUTPUT_SPEED="800kbit"
LINKTYPE="adsl local pppoe-llc"
# a few service definitions
# all the rest that are used in this example
# are defined by FireQOS
server_netdata_ports="tcp/19999"
server_rtp_ports="udp/10000:10100"
server_openvpn_ports="any/1195:1198"
server_mytorrent_ports="any/60000"
server_mytorrenttransfers_ports="any/60001:64999"
server_myssh_ports="tcp/2222"
# League Of Legends game (yes! I have kids)
server_lol_ports="udp/5000:5500 tcp/8393:8400,2099,5223,5222,8088"
interface $DEVICE world bidirectional $LINKTYPE input rate $INPUT_SPEED output rate $OUTPUT_SPEED
class voip commit 100kbit pfifo
server sip
client sip
server rtp
client stun
class interactive input commit 20% output commit 10%
server icmp limit 50%
server dns
client dns
server ssh
client ssh
server myssh
client myssh
client teamviewer
client lol
class chat input commit 1000kbit output commit 30%
client facetime
server hangouts
client hangouts
client gtalk
client jabber
class vpns input commit 20% output commit 30%
server pptp
server GRE
server openvpn
class servers
server netdata
server http
# a class group to favor tcp handshake over transfers
class group surfing prio keep commit 5%
client surfing
client rsync
class synacks
match tcp syn
match tcp ack
class group end
class synacks commit 5%
match tcp syn
match tcp ack
class default
class background commit 4%
client torrents
server mytorrent
server mytorrenttransfers
FireHOL Team.
Built 15 Oct 2022 | FireQOS Reference |