![]() |
Routers, static IPs and QoS settings
Hey guys, I'm extremely unfortunate to live with another 6 guys in the same house and we share a fairly pitiful internet connection. P99 has been quite the "go to" game over the last year or more because of its low bandwidth usage.
Sadly, a few people are unrelenting in downloading 24/7 and the only way to sneakily get around these activities aside from pulling the plug is to tinker with the "Quality of Service" settings on the router or create a "static IP", but I don't quite know the score on how to do that. I've scoured the internet and can't seem to find anything that gives definitive answers...thought I'd ask here :) QOS pictures below. The second one is full of boxes to put stuff in. Has anyone done this themselves before? Any suggestions appreciated. :) Router, for what its worth is a HG523a (made by "Huawei"... who are they?) http://i.imgur.com/cJySU.jpg http://i.imgur.com/wcFli.jpg |
Put your MAC address in the source MAC and P99's server IP Address in the Destination IP Address and set the rule as a high priority(setting the Queue to 1) and everyone else as low/mid priority. The router should take it from there.
BTW Huawei is a garbage Chinese router company. FX disclosed hundreds of vulns in their firmware recently. I would avoid. |
Also how in the sweet name of fuck would a static IP help you with data flow control?
|
obviously the dude didnt take cisco net-acad, give em a break
|
huawei confirmed shit company, buy a netgear.
|
Quote:
The static IP idea, from a bit of unconfirmed reading basically suggests that I can give a set IP address priority over every other device in the house. Lexical - just MAC addresses, leaving the IP stuff alone completely? Happy to give it a go :) |
i spoof my mac and my ip
|
Quote:
The router **SHOULD** treat the blank values as a wildcard value. Quote:
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:13 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.