docs/113464: Error regarding IPF and ALTQ in handbook
Marc Silver
marcs at draenor.org
Thu Jan 10 07:50:03 UTC 2008
The following reply was made to PR docs/113464; it has been noted by GNATS.
From: Marc Silver <marcs at draenor.org>
To: bug-followup at FreeBSD.org, josh at tcbug.org
Cc:
Subject: Re: docs/113464: Error regarding IPF and ALTQ in handbook
Date: Thu, 10 Jan 2008 09:46:38 +0200
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Hi there,
I've done a bit of research into this and from what I can see, there is
no direct support for ALTQ in IPFILTER itself. However, everything I
could find suggests that ALTQ/PF or DUMMYNET/IPFW can be used in
conjunction with IPFILTER, provided that one is dedicated to traffic
shaping and the other to filtering and NAT.
To that end I've mangled the firewall chapter to update the information
surrounding this particular issue.
Hope this helps,
Cheers,
Marc
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Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="firewall-chapter.sgml.patch"
--- chapter.sgml.orig 2008-01-10 08:46:33.000000000 +0200
+++ chapter.sgml 2008-01-10 09:35:19.000000000 +0200
@@ -151,12 +151,16 @@
<acronym>PF</acronym>). &os; also has two built in packages for
traffic shaping (basically controlling bandwidth usage):
&man.altq.4; and &man.dummynet.4;. Dummynet has traditionally been
- closely tied with <acronym>IPFW</acronym>, and
- <acronym>ALTQ</acronym> with
- <acronym>IPF</acronym>/<acronym>PF</acronym>. IPF,
- IPFW, and PF all use rules to control the access of packets to and
- from your system, although they go about it different ways and
- have different rule syntaxes.</para>
+ closely tied with <acronym>IPFW</acronym>, while
+ <acronym>ALTQ</acronym> may be used with <acronym>PF</acronym>.
+ Traffic shaping can currently be achieved with
+ <acronym>IPFILTER</acronym> by using <acronym>IPFILTER</acronym>
+ for filtering and NAT in conjunction with <acronym>IPFW</acronym>
+ and dummynet <emphasis>or</emphasis> <acronym>PF</acronym> with
+ <acronym>ALTQ</acronym> for traffic shaping. IPF IPFW, and PF all
+ use rules to control the access of packets to and from your system,
+ although they go about it different ways and have different rule
+ syntaxes.</para>
<para>The reason that &os; has multiple built in firewall packages
is that different people have different requirements and
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