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Traffic shaping and bandwidth management

This article is from the perspective of a small network, possibly a couple of people sharing one connection. It will explain traffic shaping and bandwidth management in general and with linx. It (sort of) walks through building a traffic shaping router. Why share --------- The easy answer is: "Since double-speed connection does not cost double". This is already good. Even better is the fact that most of the time the whole connection can be used only by yourself. On the image I have my bandwidth usage graphs. As you can see, it's bursty (as most of the internet is. bursty). Also plain in sight is the fact that most of the time the bandwidth isn't completely in use. 

Clicked: 31 Added: 2005-02-20 11:17:35 - Bad URL? Report it

AFS/DFS FAQ

AFS is a distributed filesystem that enables co-operating hosts (clients and servers) to efficiently share filesystem resources across both local area and wide area networks. 

Clicked: 106 Added: 2004-06-25 15:30:45 - Bad URL? Report it

Apache

The Apache HTTP Server Project is an effort to develop and maintain an open-source HTTP server for modern operating systems including UNIX and Windows NT. The goal of this project is to provide a secure, efficient and extensible server that provides HTTP services in sync with the current HTTP standards. 

Clicked: 212 Added: 2003-04-12 13:48:12 - Bad URL? Report it

ApacheWeek

everything about apache servers 

Clicked: 221 Added: 2003-04-12 13:51:06 - Bad URL? Report it

ArGoSoft Mailserver

ArGoSoft Mail Server is fully functional SMTP/POP3/Finger (Pro version also has IMAP module) server for Windows 95/98/NT/2000, which will let you turn your computer into the email system. It's very compact, takes about 1-5 Mb of disk space (depending on the version), does not have any specific memory requirements, and what is the most important - it's very easy to use. 

Clicked: 166 Added: 2003-11-17 20:29:07 - Bad URL? Report it

Creating a Linux Mail Server

This document covers how I have set up my Linux box to work as a Mail Server. The details will be specific to Arch Linux, but it will be be general enough for any *nix distribution if you have a knowledge of installing software packages, finding the location of configuration files, and starting/stoping services.. My goals in creating this mail system are to have all of my mail, from various email accounts, stored locally on my machine so I can access it anytime via SSH, the web, or imap. I wanted all of my mail delivered to my local user account and I wanted the spam to be sucked out and launched into space. The backbone of the mail system is the Mail Transport Agent (MTA). It will handle receiving mail addressed directly to your machine, sending it to the correct users mail box, and sending mail out from the machine. I determined Postfix to be the best choice for my MTA and after some reading found Procmail for sorting mail, SpamBayes for detecting spam, and Fetchmail for grabbing mail from my pop mailboxes. Bellow is a flow diagram for mail moving through the system: 

Clicked: 20 Added: 2005-11-22 20:05:27 - Bad URL? Report it

MailEnable

Several versions, including a free standard version, worth a look 

Clicked: 159 Added: 2003-11-17 20:28:21 - Bad URL? Report it

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