
C O N F I G U R I N G C O M S I F T E R
User Guide |
ComSifter CS-8D Pro
3–80
Determining the True Connection Speed
For ComSifter to effectively control the upstream buffer, it must know the true speed of the upstream
connection. Advertised ISP speeds are typically the sync rate of the cable/DSL modem. These rates do not
include the protocol between the cable/DSL modem and the ISP, or the TCP/IP protocol used over the
Internet. These protocols may cumulatively add 15-20% overhead. An advertised speed of 128Kbps upstream
may only be able to move customer data at 102Kbps. Since ComSifter QOS is buffering customer data, it will
need to use the 102Kbps, not the advertised 128Kbps.
The best method to determine the upload speed of your network is to use a connection test provided by a third
party. The following links will take you to locations on the Internet providing connection tests.
www.dslreports.com/stest
http://www.speakeasy.net/speedtest/
http://www.dsl-speed.org/test.htm
Note:
Speed tests should only be run when your network is not being used; such as
early in the morning or late at night. It is also suggested that multiple tests be
run to insure repeatability.
Figure 3-85
: Results of Speed Test
In the example above, we ran a speed test from
www.dslreports.com/stest
. Upstream speed was 309Kbps.
We will take 1% off this figure (306) and use it as our Up Speed in ComSifter
QOS incorporates three Queues. These are Default (no user control), High Priority, and Low priority. A fourth
queue, called Special Network, is available in the event that ComSifter is routing into another network that is a
part of your LAN. Each of these queues has two parameters: a rate, and a ceiling. The rate of a queue is the
transmission speed of the queue when there is traffic in a higher priority queue. Ceiling is the maximum
transmission speed of the queue when traffic is not present in a higher priority queue.
By default, all traffic starts in the Default Queue. The Default Queue is calculated at one-quarter of the Up
Speed. If the Low and Highest Queues are not defined, then the traffic in the Default Queue will share equally
the bandwidth defined in Ceiling. If the Low or High Priority Queues are defined, then traffic in those queues
will get more bandwidth than the default Queue. In the example shown below, ports 25 (SMTP), 465 (secure
SMTP), and 80 (web browsing) have been given extra bandwidth by being moved to the Low Priority Queue.
Port 53 (DNS) has been moved to the High Priority Queue giving DNS lookups the most bandwidth.
Note:
ComSifter is configured to automatically move ACK packets and short packets
(less than 1000 bytes) into the highest priority queue. This insures that uploads
will not adversely affect downloads.
Summary of Contents for CS-8D Pro
Page 1: ...ComSifter protect web users now User Guide Model CS 8D Pro Version March 26 2012 0326121500 ...
Page 153: ...F I L T E R S E T U P User Guide ComSifter CS 8D Pro 4 23 Figure 4 19 Modify Page RegEx ...
Page 194: ...U S E R S User Guide ComSifter CS 8D Pro 6 28 Figure 6 19 Windows Firewall ...
Page 215: ...U S E R S User Guide ComSifter CS 8D Pro 6 49 Figure 6 40 Add User ...
Page 219: ...U S E R S User Guide ComSifter CS 8D Pro 6 53 Figure 6 43 Add IP ...