I use Tomato on my Linksys WRT54GL router, and it allows you to define QoS (both inbound and outbound,) including by IP. You can then apply maximum bandwidth caps, priorities, etc. to those QoS levels. So if you were to give some devices static/sticky IPs, you could give them higher priority, and let the "general" IPs get lower priority and bandwidth caps. (I use it so that my VPN traffic to work gets a higher priority than my wife's Netflix traffic :P) ((Note that Tomato hasn't been updated for a few years, but it still works perfectly fine for me. I'd tried a couple of different flavors of DD-WRT, but it made my router lock up pretty regularly after I'd pass a few gigs of traffic through it; going back to Tomato (1.27) has been "set it and forget it" since then, for several years now.)) http://www.polarcloud.com/tomato -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org