(RADIATOR) How to restrict the Dial Up on Bandwith.

Tony Bunce tonyb at go-concepts.com
Sun Jun 22 02:36:40 CDT 2003


A devices like a PacketShaper may do the trick with some creative
configuration

Tony B, CCNA, Network+
Systems Administrator
GO Concepts Inc

-----Original Message-----
From: Hugh Irvine [mailto:hugh at open.com.au] 
Sent: Saturday, June 21, 2003 11:05 PM
To: mick at tsn.cc
Cc: radiator at open.com.au
Subject: Re: (RADIATOR) How to restrict the Dial Up on Bandwith.


Hello Mick -

I would think you'd have to use additional metering like Netflow or 
whatever on the router to discriminate traffic.

regards

Hugh


On Sunday, Jun 22, 2003, at 11:47 Australia/Melbourne, <mick at tsn.cc> 
wrote:

> Yes but with radius alive packets how would you have content that 
> doesn't
> count to your download total
> because radius alive counts everything.
>
> Michael saunders
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Hugh Irvine" <hugh at open.com.au>
> To: <mick at tsn.cc>
> Cc: <radiator at open.com.au>
> Sent: Sunday, June 22, 2003 11:37 AM
> Subject: Re: (RADIATOR) How to restrict the Dial Up on Bandwith.
>
>
>>
>> Hello Mick -
>>
>> This is usually done with IP filters and traffic shaping on the 
>> router.
>>
>> The accounting is done with periodic radius "Alive" requests.
>>
>> I don't know of any off-the-shelf product that does this.
>>
>> regards
>>
>> Hugh
>>
>>
>> On Sunday, Jun 22, 2003, at 08:58 Australia/Melbourne, <mick at tsn.cc>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Dear list,
>>>
>>> I am not sure if this soultion is done with Radiator or not. I have
>>> noticed
>>> many ISP's offering
>>> ADSL connections with free traffic to certain web sites. They are 
>>> also
>>> speed
>>> limiting customers when
>>> they run passed their download limit but not counting the traffic to
>>> the
>>> free websites.
>>>
>>> Anyone know how the radius accounting is done. Or does anyone know 
>>> what
>>> product they are using to do this.
>>>
>>>
>>> Michael Saunders
>>>
>>> ===
>>> Archive at http://www.open.com.au/archives/radiator/
>>> Announcements on radiator-announce at open.com.au
>>> To unsubscribe, email 'majordomo at open.com.au' with
>>> 'unsubscribe radiator' in the body of the message.
>>>
>>>
>>
>> NB: have you included a copy of your configuration file (no secrets),
>> together with a trace 4 debug showing what is happening?
>>
>> --
>> Radiator: the most portable, flexible and configurable RADIUS server
>> anywhere. Available on *NIX, *BSD, Windows 95/98/2000, NT, MacOS X.
>> -
>> Nets: internetwork inventory and management - graphical, extensible,
>> flexible with hardware, software, platform and database independence.
>>
>>
>
>

NB: have you included a copy of your configuration file (no secrets),
together with a trace 4 debug showing what is happening?

-- 
Radiator: the most portable, flexible and configurable RADIUS server
anywhere. Available on *NIX, *BSD, Windows 95/98/2000, NT, MacOS X.
-
Nets: internetwork inventory and management - graphical, extensible,
flexible with hardware, software, platform and database independence.

===
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===
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