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TC(8) Linux TC(8)

NAME

tc - show / manipulate traffic control settings

SYNOPSIS

tc qdisc [ add | change | replace | link ] dev DEV [ parent qdisc-id | root ] [ handle qdisc-id ] qdisc [ qdisc specific parameters ]

tc class [ add | change | replace ] dev DEV parent qdisc-id [ classid class-id ] qdisc [ qdisc specific parameters ]

tc filter [ add | change | replace ] dev DEV [ parent qdisc-id | root ] protocol protocol prio priority filtertype [ filtertype specific parameters ] flowid flow-id

tc [ FORMAT ] qdisc show [ dev DEV ]

tc [ FORMAT ] class show dev DEV

tc filter show dev DEV

tc [ -force ] [ -OK ] -b[atch] [ filename ]

FORMAT := { -s[tatistics] | -d[etails] | -r[aw] | -p[retty] | i[ec] }

DESCRIPTION

Tc is used to configure Traffic Control in the Linux kernel. Traffic Control consists of the following:

When traffic is shaped, its rate of transmission is under control. Shaping may be more than lowering the available bandwidth - it is also used to smooth out bursts in traffic for better network behaviour. Shaping occurs on egress.

By scheduling the transmission of packets it is possible to improve interactivity for traffic that needs it while still guaranteeing bandwidth to bulk transfers. Reordering is also called prioritizing, and happens only on egress.

Whereas shaping deals with transmission of traffic, policing pertains to traffic arriving. Policing thus occurs on ingress.

Traffic exceeding a set bandwidth may also be dropped forthwith, both on ingress and on egress.

Processing of traffic is controlled by three kinds of objects: qdiscs, classes and filters.

QDISCS

qdisc is short for 'queueing discipline' and it is elementary to understanding traffic control. Whenever the kernel needs to send a packet to an interface, it is enqueued to the qdisc configured for that interface. Immediately afterwards, the kernel tries to get as many packets as possible from the qdisc, for giving them to the network adaptor driver.

A simple QDISC is the 'pfifo' one, which does no processing at all and is a pure First In, First Out queue. It does however store traffic when the network interface can't handle it momentarily.

CLASSES

Some qdiscs can contain classes, which contain further qdiscs - traffic may then be enqueued in any of the inner qdiscs, which are within the classes. When the kernel tries to dequeue a packet from such a classful qdisc it can come from any of the classes. A qdisc may for example prioritize certain kinds of traffic by trying to dequeue from certain classes before others.

FILTERS

A filter is used by a classful qdisc to determine in which class a packet will be enqueued. Whenever traffic arrives at a class with subclasses, it needs to be classified. Various methods may be employed to do so, one of these are the filters. All filters attached to the class are called, until one of them returns with a verdict. If no verdict was made, other criteria may be available. This differs per qdisc.

It is important to notice that filters reside within qdiscs - they are not masters of what happens.

The available filters are:

Filter packets based on an ematch expression. See tc-ematch(8) for details.
Filter packets based on the control group of their process. See tc-cgroup(8) for details.
Flow-based classifier, filtering packets based on their flow (identified by selectable keys). See tc-flow(8) for details.
Filter based on fwmark. Directly maps fwmark value to traffic class. See tc-fw(8).
Filter packets based on routing table. See tc-route(8) for details.
Match Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) packets.
Filter packets based on traffic control index. See tc-index(8).
Generic filtering on arbitrary packet data, assisted by syntax to abstract common operations. See tc-u32(8) for details.

CLASSLESS QDISCS

The classless qdiscs are:

[p|b]fifo
Simplest usable qdisc, pure First In, First Out behaviour. Limited in packets or in bytes.
Standard qdisc for 'Advanced Router' enabled kernels. Consists of a three-band queue which honors Type of Service flags, as well as the priority that may be assigned to a packet.
Random Early Detection simulates physical congestion by randomly dropping packets when nearing configured bandwidth allocation. Well suited to very large bandwidth applications.
Stochastic Fairness Queueing reorders queued traffic so each 'session' gets to send a packet in turn.
The Token Bucket Filter is suited for slowing traffic down to a precisely configured rate. Scales well to large bandwidths.

CONFIGURING CLASSLESS QDISCS

In the absence of classful qdiscs, classless qdiscs can only be attached at the root of a device. Full syntax:

tc qdisc add dev DEV root QDISC QDISC-PARAMETERS

To remove, issue

tc qdisc del dev DEV root

The pfifo_fast qdisc is the automatic default in the absence of a configured qdisc.

CLASSFUL QDISCS

The classful qdiscs are:

Class Based Queueing implements a rich linksharing hierarchy of classes. It contains shaping elements as well as prioritizing capabilities. Shaping is performed using link idle time calculations based on average packet size and underlying link bandwidth. The latter may be ill-defined for some interfaces.
The Hierarchy Token Bucket implements a rich linksharing hierarchy of classes with an emphasis on conforming to existing practices. HTB facilitates guaranteeing bandwidth to classes, while also allowing specification of upper limits to inter-class sharing. It contains shaping elements, based on TBF and can prioritize classes.
The PRIO qdisc is a non-shaping container for a configurable number of classes which are dequeued in order. This allows for easy prioritization of traffic, where lower classes are only able to send if higher ones have no packets available. To facilitate configuration, Type Of Service bits are honored by default.

THEORY OF OPERATION

Classes form a tree, where each class has a single parent. A class may have multiple children. Some qdiscs allow for runtime addition of classes (CBQ, HTB) while others (PRIO) are created with a static number of children.

Qdiscs which allow dynamic addition of classes can have zero or more subclasses to which traffic may be enqueued.

Furthermore, each class contains a leaf qdisc which by default has pfifo behaviour, although another qdisc can be attached in place. This qdisc may again contain classes, but each class can have only one leaf qdisc.

When a packet enters a classful qdisc it can be classified to one of the classes within. Three criteria are available, although not all qdiscs will use all three:

If tc filters are attached to a class, they are consulted first for relevant instructions. Filters can match on all fields of a packet header, as well as on the firewall mark applied by ipchains or iptables.
Some qdiscs have built in rules for classifying packets based on the TOS field.
Userspace programs can encode a class-id in the 'skb->priority' field using the SO_PRIORITY option.

Each node within the tree can have its own filters but higher level filters may also point directly to lower classes.

If classification did not succeed, packets are enqueued to the leaf qdisc attached to that class. Check qdisc specific manpages for details, however.

NAMING

All qdiscs, classes and filters have IDs, which can either be specified or be automatically assigned.

IDs consist of a major number and a minor number, separated by a colon. Both major and minor number are limited to 16 bits. There are two special values: root is signified by major and minor of all ones, and unspecified is all zeros.

A qdisc, which potentially can have children, gets assigned a major number, called a 'handle', leaving the minor number namespace available for classes. The handle is expressed as '10:'. It is customary to explicitly assign a handle to qdiscs expected to have children.

Classes residing under a qdisc share their qdisc major number, but each have a separate minor number called a 'classid' that has no relation to their parent classes, only to their parent qdisc. The same naming custom as for qdiscs applies.

Filters have a three part ID, which is only needed when using a hashed filter hierarchy.

UNITS

All parameters accept a floating point number, possibly followed by a unit.

Bandwidths or rates can be specified in:

Kilobytes per second
Megabytes per second
Kilobits per second
Megabits per second
Bytes per second

Amounts of data can be specified in:

Kilobytes
Megabytes
Megabits
Kilobits
b or a bare number
Bytes.

Lengths of time can be specified in:

Whole seconds
Milliseconds
Microseconds.

TC COMMANDS

The following commands are available for qdiscs, classes and filter:

Add a qdisc, class or filter to a node. For all entities, a parent must be passed, either by passing its ID or by attaching directly to the root of a device. When creating a qdisc or a filter, it can be named with the handle parameter. A class is named with the classid parameter.

A qdisc can be removed by specifying its handle, which may also be 'root'. All subclasses and their leaf qdiscs are automatically deleted, as well as any filters attached to them.

Some entities can be modified 'in place'. Shares the syntax of 'add', with the exception that the handle cannot be changed and neither can the parent. In other words, change cannot move a node.

Performs a nearly atomic remove/add on an existing node id. If the node does not exist yet it is created.

Only available for qdiscs and performs a replace where the node must exist already.

FORMAT

The show command has additional formatting options:

output more statistics about packet usage.

output more detailed information about rates and cell sizes.

output raw hex values for handles.

decode filter offset and mask values to equivalent filter commands based on TCP/IP.

print rates in IEC units (ie. 1K = 1024).

read commands from provided file or standard input and invoke them. First failure will cause termination of tc.

don't terminate tc on errors in batch mode. If there were any errors during execution of the commands, the application return code will be non zero.

in batch mode, print OK and a new line on standard output after each successfully interpreted command.

HISTORY

tc was written by Alexey N. Kuznetsov and added in Linux 2.2.

SEE ALSO

tc-basic(8), tc-bfifo(8), tc-cbq(8), tc-cgroup(8), tc-drr(8), tc-ematch(8), tc-flow(8), tc-fw(8), tc-htb(8), tc-pfifo(8), tc-pfifo_fast(8), tc-red(8), tc-route(8), tc-sfq(8), tc-tbf(8), tc-tcindex(8), tc-u32(8),
User documentation at http://lartc.org/, but please direct bugreports and patches to: <netdev@vger.kernel.org>

AUTHOR

Manpage maintained by bert hubert (ahu@ds9a.nl)

16 December 2001 iproute2