ML
    • Recent
    • Categories
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Groups
    • Register
    • Login

    Limiting Bandwidth

    IT Discussion
    8
    71
    3.1k
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • S
      scottalanmiller @momurda
      last edited by

      @momurda said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

      @scottalanmiller So he is getting DDOS? Come on.
      I can easily set the bandwidth on my external fw port to a value between 1 and 1000Mb/s, and whatever that limit is cant be exceeded. No device on the internal network will pull more than this from outside, ever. Not sure why anybody would want to do that as i said earlier, but it is possible.
      I could even set the bandwidth max on an internal fw port to any of these values for the same effect.

      That's not how it works. You put that limit on the outside interface and the internal devices absolutely will pull more than that from it. Their ability to request more speed isn't affected by that limit. It will actually act like a DDoS attack, but obviously isn't really one.

      The firewall has zero ability to influence the rate at which data arrives at it, normally that is limited far away at the other end of the WAN. If you add a limit on your firewall, the lack of packets making it back to devices will normally encourage their network stacks to start rate limiting based on the failures of packets to arrive, but nothing forces them to. The WAN will continue to get more traffic than the firewall is allowing through and the bottleneck will be moved from the far point of the network to the near one.

      It can encourage internal devices to request data more slowly, but only sometimes and in no way creates the hard limit that you are imagining.

      From an end point perspective, the traffic has been limited. From the WAN perspective, where it matters, it has not.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • S
        scottalanmiller @momurda
        last edited by

        @momurda said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

        @dashrender Unsolicited? Now youre talking about ddos, which is impossible under normal circumstances. Unless this is about hosting a voip conference call with 10000 users at once on a 10mb connection.

        It's solicited. That's the problem. People request a YouTube video, YouTube sends the stream. And will often do so higher than your firewall limit.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • D
          Dashrender @momurda
          last edited by

          @momurda said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

          @dashrender Unsolicited? Now youre talking about ddos, which is impossible under normal circumstances. Unless this is about hosting a voip conference call with 10000 users at once on a 10mb connection.

          But it's not unsolicited. The users are streaming. For example, Netflix will keep sending more and more packets until they stop getting the needed responses or it maxes out the speed needed for a given resolution - it's part of their auto resolution solution. If you have a crappy internet connection, you get a crappy looking video, if you have a fast internet connection, you get good looking video.

          Now yes, if you limit it, and allow the VOIP traffic to not be limited, then you will have that always open head room - but then you should look at Scott's video and he explains why this is bad.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • D
            Dashrender @wirestyle22
            last edited by

            @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

            @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

            I don't understand why "HEY USERS, STOP WATCHING YOUTUBE ALL DAY!!!!" isn't the obvious solution here. Your coworker wants to use tech to solve a people issue. No video streaming = no more bandwidth issues.

            I'm using youtube as an example, I have no idea what they are watching or on what platform. I just know it's not hosted by them and they access it over the WAN

            His point was - when people complain (or logging servers send alerts about issues) you look at who and what is happening and tell those people to knock it off.

            W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • W
              wirestyle22 @Dashrender
              last edited by

              @dashrender said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

              @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

              @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

              I don't understand why "HEY USERS, STOP WATCHING YOUTUBE ALL DAY!!!!" isn't the obvious solution here. Your coworker wants to use tech to solve a people issue. No video streaming = no more bandwidth issues.

              I'm using youtube as an example, I have no idea what they are watching or on what platform. I just know it's not hosted by them and they access it over the WAN

              His point was - when people complain (or logging servers send alerts about issues) you look at who and what is happening and tell those people to knock it off.

              I have been told it's for business purposes. It's a foster care non-profit so i have no idea how or why, but let's assume they are right for now

              D R S 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • R
                RojoLoco @wirestyle22
                last edited by

                @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                I don't understand why "HEY USERS, STOP WATCHING YOUTUBE ALL DAY!!!!" isn't the obvious solution here. Your coworker wants to use tech to solve a people issue. No video streaming = no more bandwidth issues.

                I'm using youtube as an example, I have no idea what they are watching or on what platform. I just know it's not hosted by them and they access it over the WAN

                Do they actually need it for some work related thing? If not, block that shit and put a no streaming policy in place. If they do actually need it, I have no idea how to solve the problem.

                S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                • D
                  Dashrender @wirestyle22
                  last edited by

                  @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                  @dashrender said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                  @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                  @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                  I don't understand why "HEY USERS, STOP WATCHING YOUTUBE ALL DAY!!!!" isn't the obvious solution here. Your coworker wants to use tech to solve a people issue. No video streaming = no more bandwidth issues.

                  I'm using youtube as an example, I have no idea what they are watching or on what platform. I just know it's not hosted by them and they access it over the WAN

                  His point was - when people complain (or logging servers send alerts about issues) you look at who and what is happening and tell those people to knock it off.

                  I have been told it's for business purposes. It's a foster care non-profit so i have no idea how or why, but let's assume they are right for now

                  Then you simply need more bandwidth. That's it. That's the only correct answer.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
                  • W
                    wirestyle22
                    last edited by

                    I'm glad it's not just me but this is why I ask. I already came to the correct conclusion for once. Thanks guys

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                    • D
                      Dashrender
                      last edited by

                      As Scott has said - you could put the limit in place that @momurda is talking about, but this means that the applications that are using all the bandwidth have to abide by the desire to lower transfer rate, and are able to send that request to the sender... not everything works correctly like that.

                      So if everything is working correctly like that, then yes, you could leave yourself with say 10 Mb of head room, and have rules that allow the VOIP traffic to use it (but would only matter outbound, likely where there is no real issue).

                      But if the apps causing the download don't slow down the downloads, then the pipe will still get crushed by incoming traffic and VOIP traffic will have a hard time/impossible time making it through to your firewall from the internet.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • R
                        RojoLoco @wirestyle22
                        last edited by

                        @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                        @dashrender said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                        @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                        @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                        I don't understand why "HEY USERS, STOP WATCHING YOUTUBE ALL DAY!!!!" isn't the obvious solution here. Your coworker wants to use tech to solve a people issue. No video streaming = no more bandwidth issues.

                        I'm using youtube as an example, I have no idea what they are watching or on what platform. I just know it's not hosted by them and they access it over the WAN

                        His point was - when people complain (or logging servers send alerts about issues) you look at who and what is happening and tell those people to knock it off.

                        I have been told it's for business purposes. It's a foster care non-profit so i have no idea how or why, but let's assume they are right for now

                        Ouch. But since they are a non-profit, tell them to have fun calling up their ISP to ask for more bandwidth pro bono.

                        They are paying you to work there, right? Don't fall for their "can I get that for free" BS.

                        W S 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • W
                          wirestyle22 @RojoLoco
                          last edited by wirestyle22

                          @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                          @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                          @dashrender said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                          @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                          @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                          I don't understand why "HEY USERS, STOP WATCHING YOUTUBE ALL DAY!!!!" isn't the obvious solution here. Your coworker wants to use tech to solve a people issue. No video streaming = no more bandwidth issues.

                          I'm using youtube as an example, I have no idea what they are watching or on what platform. I just know it's not hosted by them and they access it over the WAN

                          His point was - when people complain (or logging servers send alerts about issues) you look at who and what is happening and tell those people to knock it off.

                          I have been told it's for business purposes. It's a foster care non-profit so i have no idea how or why, but let's assume they are right for now

                          Ouch. But since they are a non-profit, tell them to have fun calling up their ISP to ask for more bandwidth pro bono.

                          They are paying you to work there, right? Don't fall for their "can I get that for free" BS.

                          It's not me. My co-worker has a habit of doing things the wrong way and then telling me it's easier and that's why. Unfortunately the owners think everything he says is gospel.

                          R S 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • R
                            RojoLoco @wirestyle22
                            last edited by

                            @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                            @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                            @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                            @dashrender said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                            @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                            @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                            I don't understand why "HEY USERS, STOP WATCHING YOUTUBE ALL DAY!!!!" isn't the obvious solution here. Your coworker wants to use tech to solve a people issue. No video streaming = no more bandwidth issues.

                            I'm using youtube as an example, I have no idea what they are watching or on what platform. I just know it's not hosted by them and they access it over the WAN

                            His point was - when people complain (or logging servers send alerts about issues) you look at who and what is happening and tell those people to knock it off.

                            I have been told it's for business purposes. It's a foster care non-profit so i have no idea how or why, but let's assume they are right for now

                            Ouch. But since they are a non-profit, tell them to have fun calling up their ISP to ask for more bandwidth pro bono.

                            They are paying you to work there, right? Don't fall for their "can I get that for free" BS.

                            It's not me. My co-worker has a habit of doing things the wrong way and then telling me it's easier and that's why. Unfortunately the owners think everything he says is gospel.

                            And that is why I will NEVER work for a non-profit or church (not even a side gig).

                            W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • W
                              wirestyle22 @RojoLoco
                              last edited by

                              @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                              @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                              @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                              @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                              @dashrender said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                              @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                              @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                              I don't understand why "HEY USERS, STOP WATCHING YOUTUBE ALL DAY!!!!" isn't the obvious solution here. Your coworker wants to use tech to solve a people issue. No video streaming = no more bandwidth issues.

                              I'm using youtube as an example, I have no idea what they are watching or on what platform. I just know it's not hosted by them and they access it over the WAN

                              His point was - when people complain (or logging servers send alerts about issues) you look at who and what is happening and tell those people to knock it off.

                              I have been told it's for business purposes. It's a foster care non-profit so i have no idea how or why, but let's assume they are right for now

                              Ouch. But since they are a non-profit, tell them to have fun calling up their ISP to ask for more bandwidth pro bono.

                              They are paying you to work there, right? Don't fall for their "can I get that for free" BS.

                              It's not me. My co-worker has a habit of doing things the wrong way and then telling me it's easier and that's why. Unfortunately the owners think everything he says is gospel.

                              And that is why I will NEVER work for a non-profit or church (not even a side gig).

                              I'm at an MSP so it's a lot worse than that

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • S
                                scottalanmiller @wirestyle22
                                last edited by

                                @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                @dashrender said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                I don't understand why "HEY USERS, STOP WATCHING YOUTUBE ALL DAY!!!!" isn't the obvious solution here. Your coworker wants to use tech to solve a people issue. No video streaming = no more bandwidth issues.

                                I'm using youtube as an example, I have no idea what they are watching or on what platform. I just know it's not hosted by them and they access it over the WAN

                                His point was - when people complain (or logging servers send alerts about issues) you look at who and what is happening and tell those people to knock it off.

                                I have been told it's for business purposes. It's a foster care non-profit so i have no idea how or why, but let's assume they are right for now

                                Then they need to pay what it costs to get what they need.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • S
                                  scottalanmiller @RojoLoco
                                  last edited by

                                  @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                  @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                  @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                  I don't understand why "HEY USERS, STOP WATCHING YOUTUBE ALL DAY!!!!" isn't the obvious solution here. Your coworker wants to use tech to solve a people issue. No video streaming = no more bandwidth issues.

                                  I'm using youtube as an example, I have no idea what they are watching or on what platform. I just know it's not hosted by them and they access it over the WAN

                                  Do they actually need it for some work related thing? If not, block that shit and put a no streaming policy in place. If they do actually need it, I have no idea how to solve the problem.

                                  If they need it, then they need more than they are currently paying for. It's simple. Like any business, if you say that you "need" something that means you "have to pay for it." Some things are free, some are not. This is not. It's simple.

                                  I "need" a car, but just because I can't afford one doesn't mean that I get one for free anyway.

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                  • S
                                    scottalanmiller @RojoLoco
                                    last edited by

                                    @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                    @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                    @dashrender said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                    @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                    @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                    I don't understand why "HEY USERS, STOP WATCHING YOUTUBE ALL DAY!!!!" isn't the obvious solution here. Your coworker wants to use tech to solve a people issue. No video streaming = no more bandwidth issues.

                                    I'm using youtube as an example, I have no idea what they are watching or on what platform. I just know it's not hosted by them and they access it over the WAN

                                    His point was - when people complain (or logging servers send alerts about issues) you look at who and what is happening and tell those people to knock it off.

                                    I have been told it's for business purposes. It's a foster care non-profit so i have no idea how or why, but let's assume they are right for now

                                    Ouch. But since they are a non-profit, tell them to have fun calling up their ISP to ask for more bandwidth pro bono.

                                    They are paying you to work there, right? Don't fall for their "can I get that for free" BS.

                                    What would be better is getting a second line just for the voice.

                                    PenguinWranglerP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • S
                                      scottalanmiller @wirestyle22
                                      last edited by

                                      @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                      @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                      @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                      @dashrender said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                      @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                      @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                      I don't understand why "HEY USERS, STOP WATCHING YOUTUBE ALL DAY!!!!" isn't the obvious solution here. Your coworker wants to use tech to solve a people issue. No video streaming = no more bandwidth issues.

                                      I'm using youtube as an example, I have no idea what they are watching or on what platform. I just know it's not hosted by them and they access it over the WAN

                                      His point was - when people complain (or logging servers send alerts about issues) you look at who and what is happening and tell those people to knock it off.

                                      I have been told it's for business purposes. It's a foster care non-profit so i have no idea how or why, but let's assume they are right for now

                                      Ouch. But since they are a non-profit, tell them to have fun calling up their ISP to ask for more bandwidth pro bono.

                                      They are paying you to work there, right? Don't fall for their "can I get that for free" BS.

                                      It's not me. My co-worker has a habit of doing things the wrong way and then telling me it's easier and that's why. Unfortunately the owners think everything he says is gospel.

                                      Um, duh. Because the owner is the one benefiting most from overselling systems and breaking things to generate more work. of course he likes his ideas.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • PenguinWranglerP
                                        PenguinWrangler @scottalanmiller
                                        last edited by

                                        @scottalanmiller said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                        @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                        @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                        @dashrender said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                        @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                        @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                        I don't understand why "HEY USERS, STOP WATCHING YOUTUBE ALL DAY!!!!" isn't the obvious solution here. Your coworker wants to use tech to solve a people issue. No video streaming = no more bandwidth issues.

                                        I'm using youtube as an example, I have no idea what they are watching or on what platform. I just know it's not hosted by them and they access it over the WAN

                                        His point was - when people complain (or logging servers send alerts about issues) you look at who and what is happening and tell those people to knock it off.

                                        I have been told it's for business purposes. It's a foster care non-profit so i have no idea how or why, but let's assume they are right for now

                                        Ouch. But since they are a non-profit, tell them to have fun calling up their ISP to ask for more bandwidth pro bono.

                                        They are paying you to work there, right? Don't fall for their "can I get that for free" BS.

                                        What would be better is getting a second line just for the voice.

                                        Voice takes so little that it doesn't cost that much usually. I would go this route.

                                        D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                        • D
                                          Dashrender @PenguinWrangler
                                          last edited by

                                          @penguinwrangler said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                          @scottalanmiller said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                          @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                          @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                          @dashrender said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                          @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                          @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                          I don't understand why "HEY USERS, STOP WATCHING YOUTUBE ALL DAY!!!!" isn't the obvious solution here. Your coworker wants to use tech to solve a people issue. No video streaming = no more bandwidth issues.

                                          I'm using youtube as an example, I have no idea what they are watching or on what platform. I just know it's not hosted by them and they access it over the WAN

                                          His point was - when people complain (or logging servers send alerts about issues) you look at who and what is happening and tell those people to knock it off.

                                          I have been told it's for business purposes. It's a foster care non-profit so i have no idea how or why, but let's assume they are right for now

                                          Ouch. But since they are a non-profit, tell them to have fun calling up their ISP to ask for more bandwidth pro bono.

                                          They are paying you to work there, right? Don't fall for their "can I get that for free" BS.

                                          What would be better is getting a second line just for the voice.

                                          Voice takes so little that it doesn't cost that much usually. I would go this route.

                                          A second business line will still have a minimal cost, that could be like $80/m

                                          PenguinWranglerP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • PenguinWranglerP
                                            PenguinWrangler @Dashrender
                                            last edited by PenguinWrangler

                                            @dashrender said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                            @penguinwrangler said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                            @scottalanmiller said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                            @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                            @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                            @dashrender said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                            @wirestyle22 said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                            @rojoloco said in Limiting Bandwidth (Help me name this thread):

                                            I don't understand why "HEY USERS, STOP WATCHING YOUTUBE ALL DAY!!!!" isn't the obvious solution here. Your coworker wants to use tech to solve a people issue. No video streaming = no more bandwidth issues.

                                            I'm using youtube as an example, I have no idea what they are watching or on what platform. I just know it's not hosted by them and they access it over the WAN

                                            His point was - when people complain (or logging servers send alerts about issues) you look at who and what is happening and tell those people to knock it off.

                                            I have been told it's for business purposes. It's a foster care non-profit so i have no idea how or why, but let's assume they are right for now

                                            Ouch. But since they are a non-profit, tell them to have fun calling up their ISP to ask for more bandwidth pro bono.

                                            They are paying you to work there, right? Don't fall for their "can I get that for free" BS.

                                            What would be better is getting a second line just for the voice.

                                            Voice takes so little that it doesn't cost that much usually. I would go this route.

                                            A second business line will still have a minimal cost, that could be like $80/m

                                            I meant VOIP takes so little bandwidth. Sorry bad wording.

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                            • 1
                                            • 2
                                            • 3
                                            • 4
                                            • 2 / 4
                                            • First post
                                              Last post