On 07/21/2016 02:26 AM, jdd wrote:
Le 21/07/2016 à 11:02, Oliver Kurz a écrit :
current browser or chain the new one after your standard, disable wifi on standard and let all guests and yourself connect over the new router
may be an other simpler solution could to buy an other QoS capable wifi router, keep for yourself the main wifi and bandwidth and give guests the other wifi passwd
any old PC with wifi could be used as other router
if your present laptop is always connected, may be you can build a secondary access point with it or simply add an other wifi interface to it
jdd
Unless Daniel's telco router is fairly new, I suspect your way is the only way this would work and even that might be a bit of overkill. Most telco modem/routers DO have a capability to operate in straight through mode, which just passes everything to your local network with no restrictions. This option Disables the router portion and also the wifi if any, and hand it all over to your own router that you can manage. That's what I do, and the only thing connected to modem is a linux box with Iptables controlled by Shorewall. Shorewall offers QOS and bandwidth control via Traffic Shaping. http://shorewall.net/simple_traffic_shaping.html (Suse Firewall might work as well, but frankly once I found Shorewall I stopped looking). Now as to the Traffic Shaping part of Shorewall? I confess I don't use it. I suspect this is more infrastructure to manage than Dan was looking for. -- After all is said and done, more is said than done. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org