No, other than wondering if the grass is greener on the other side.@dave14305 Would the new firmware with CAKE built in have any effect those those of us using Flexqos?
People who need HW acceleration should still prefer Adaptive QoS over Cake.
No, other than wondering if the grass is greener on the other side.@dave14305 Would the new firmware with CAKE built in have any effect those those of us using Flexqos?
I'd imagine for some "it's the icing on the cake".....OK, I'm leaving now.No, other than wondering if the grass is greener on the other side.
Which option on FlexQoS is that? "Ethernet with VLAN"?I use 44 ethernet overhead for my fiber connection.
*ref. https://openwrt.org/docs/guide-user/network/traffic-shaping/sqm-details#sqmlink_layer_adaptation_tab
No, other than wondering if the grass is greener on the other side.
People who need HW acceleration should still prefer Adaptive QoS over Cake.
Which option on FlexQoS is that? "Ethernet with VLAN"?
Those options for WAN packet overhead are SOOO not user-friendly. The most cryptic thing I have come across in regards to network. Why doesn't the options follow some sort of ELI5? Like including the bandwidth estimated range for each option or something.
550/50 here. Sorry, you're stuck with meNo, other than wondering if the grass is greener on the other side.
People who need HW acceleration should still prefer Adaptive QoS over Cake.
@dave14305 does the Flexqos tab hide itself if you switch to Cake automatically?
No, Adaptive QoS probably wouldn't let you.3) Can I delete download rules?, or any rules for that matter? I have a good bandwidth so if I disable QoS and perform a bufferbloat test, the results are even better (for download) than with QoS enabled, so I'd like to know if it's possible to delete download rules and see how it goes.
Quantum generally refers to the number of bytes that a QoS class is allowed to send before having to stop and allow another class to send its data. It's like in school when you'd all be standing in line for the water fountain and the person at the fountain is taking too long, and the next guy in line says, "Save some for the fish!". That guy can then go to the back of the line and wait his turn again. Quantum ensures fairness among multiple competing classes so that lower priority classes do not get starved for bandwidth (or water).4) I've been searching (the web, this thread, etc) what quantum is with regards to QoS. And I'm none the wiser. What is quantum and what does it do?
Burst is the number of bytes that a QoS class can send before being subjected to the rate limits for that class. There's no speed limit at all until you've exhausted your burst allowance. Smaller burst values can keep tighter control on bandwidth and latency, but can also tend to underfill your link and lower your throughput.5) How does burst work? In mikrotik if a class got to the rate limit, burst would kick in and decide how much it could go above that rate limit and for how much time. So I had three main parameters to change, burst threshold (the burst switch on/off) burst limit (maximum data rate that can be achieved whilst burst is allowed) and burst time (not real time, just used to calculate the average rates and ultimately the burst time).
Thats sounds good, same here that and QoS. Maybe make it the 2nd tab.What would be the general reaction to moving the FlexQoS tab to the head of the Adaptive QoS tab section? Personally, I always click over to FlexQoS when opening this menu, so it would save me an extra click.
Would it bother anyone if this was the new tab position? Would you think I was trying to take over the world?
View attachment 31621
Maybe make it the 2nd tab.
Yes, a great idea, please!What would be the general reaction to moving the FlexQoS tab to the head of the Adaptive QoS tab section? Personally, I always click over to FlexQoS when opening this menu, so it would save me an extra click.
Would it bother anyone if this was the new tab position? Would you think I was trying to take over the world?
View attachment 31621
What would be the general reaction to moving the FlexQoS tab to the head of the Adaptive QoS tab section? Personally, I always click over to FlexQoS when opening this menu, so it would save me an extra click.
Would it bother anyone if this was the new tab position? Would you think I was trying to take over the world?
Thank you so much, dave. I'll tweak those burst values to see how it affects online gaming.No, Adaptive QoS probably wouldn't let you.
Quantum generally refers to the number of bytes that a QoS class is allowed to send before having to stop and allow another class to send its data. It's like in school when you'd all be standing in line for the water fountain and the person at the fountain is taking too long, and the next guy in line says, "Save some for the fish!". That guy can then go to the back of the line and wait his turn again. Quantum ensures fairness among multiple competing classes so that lower priority classes do not get starved for bandwidth (or water).
Burst is the number of bytes that a QoS class can send before being subjected to the rate limits for that class. There's no speed limit at all until you've exhausted your burst allowance. Smaller burst values can keep tighter control on bandwidth and latency, but can also tend to underfill your link and lower your throughput.
I don't have any expertise on questions 1 or 2.
Burst is the size of the Bucket in Hierarchical Token Bucket (HTB). Each class earns their Tokens at their defined Rate. But if they aren’t using those tokens (i.e. idle), they will accumulate only to the point it has enough tokens for burst bytes. Anything more overflows the bucket and spills on the floor, so to speak. So you get to go full speed if you‘ve been idle, but once you use up your burst, it’s only replenished at the speed of rate, so you won’t build up a new burst until you’ve sent less than your rate.As for burst, does it work per second? I mean, those are the specific bytes that can be used each second before going to rate limit or is it calculated differently?
I don’t know what more can be done. In the develop branch, all bursts can be minimum of 1600 instead of 3200. I might be out of ideas. Try cake in the next Gnuton build and see how it works.I saw another hotfix came out ... but that hasn't changed.
Thanks again
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