1# 2# Traffic control configuration. 3# 4 5menuconfig NET_SCHED 6 bool "QoS and/or fair queueing" 7 select NET_SCH_FIFO 8 ---help--- 9 When the kernel has several packets to send out over a network 10 device, it has to decide which ones to send first, which ones to 11 delay, and which ones to drop. This is the job of the queueing 12 disciplines, several different algorithms for how to do this 13 "fairly" have been proposed. 14 15 If you say N here, you will get the standard packet scheduler, which 16 is a FIFO (first come, first served). If you say Y here, you will be 17 able to choose from among several alternative algorithms which can 18 then be attached to different network devices. This is useful for 19 example if some of your network devices are real time devices that 20 need a certain minimum data flow rate, or if you need to limit the 21 maximum data flow rate for traffic which matches specified criteria. 22 This code is considered to be experimental. 23 24 To administer these schedulers, you'll need the user-level utilities 25 from the package iproute2+tc at <ftp://ftp.tux.org/pub/net/ip-routing/>. 26 That package also contains some documentation; for more, check out 27 <http://www.linuxfoundation.org/collaborate/workgroups/networking/iproute2>. 28 29 This Quality of Service (QoS) support will enable you to use 30 Differentiated Services (diffserv) and Resource Reservation Protocol 31 (RSVP) on your Linux router if you also say Y to the corresponding 32 classifiers below. Documentation and software is at 33 <http://diffserv.sourceforge.net/>. 34 35 If you say Y here and to "/proc file system" below, you will be able 36 to read status information about packet schedulers from the file 37 /proc/net/psched. 38 39 The available schedulers are listed in the following questions; you 40 can say Y to as many as you like. If unsure, say N now. 41 42if NET_SCHED 43 44comment "Queueing/Scheduling" 45 46config NET_SCH_CBQ 47 tristate "Class Based Queueing (CBQ)" 48 ---help--- 49 Say Y here if you want to use the Class-Based Queueing (CBQ) packet 50 scheduling algorithm. This algorithm classifies the waiting packets 51 into a tree-like hierarchy of classes; the leaves of this tree are 52 in turn scheduled by separate algorithms. 53 54 See the top of <file:net/sched/sch_cbq.c> for more details. 55 56 CBQ is a commonly used scheduler, so if you're unsure, you should 57 say Y here. Then say Y to all the queueing algorithms below that you 58 want to use as leaf disciplines. 59 60 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 61 module will be called sch_cbq. 62 63config NET_SCH_HTB 64 tristate "Hierarchical Token Bucket (HTB)" 65 ---help--- 66 Say Y here if you want to use the Hierarchical Token Buckets (HTB) 67 packet scheduling algorithm. See 68 <http://luxik.cdi.cz/~devik/qos/htb/> for complete manual and 69 in-depth articles. 70 71 HTB is very similar to CBQ regarding its goals however is has 72 different properties and different algorithm. 73 74 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 75 module will be called sch_htb. 76 77config NET_SCH_HFSC 78 tristate "Hierarchical Fair Service Curve (HFSC)" 79 ---help--- 80 Say Y here if you want to use the Hierarchical Fair Service Curve 81 (HFSC) packet scheduling algorithm. 82 83 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 84 module will be called sch_hfsc. 85 86config NET_SCH_ATM 87 tristate "ATM Virtual Circuits (ATM)" 88 depends on ATM 89 ---help--- 90 Say Y here if you want to use the ATM pseudo-scheduler. This 91 provides a framework for invoking classifiers, which in turn 92 select classes of this queuing discipline. Each class maps 93 the flow(s) it is handling to a given virtual circuit. 94 95 See the top of <file:net/sched/sch_atm.c> for more details. 96 97 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 98 module will be called sch_atm. 99 100config NET_SCH_PRIO 101 tristate "Multi Band Priority Queueing (PRIO)" 102 ---help--- 103 Say Y here if you want to use an n-band priority queue packet 104 scheduler. 105 106 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 107 module will be called sch_prio. 108 109config NET_SCH_MULTIQ 110 tristate "Hardware Multiqueue-aware Multi Band Queuing (MULTIQ)" 111 ---help--- 112 Say Y here if you want to use an n-band queue packet scheduler 113 to support devices that have multiple hardware transmit queues. 114 115 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 116 module will be called sch_multiq. 117 118config NET_SCH_RED 119 tristate "Random Early Detection (RED)" 120 ---help--- 121 Say Y here if you want to use the Random Early Detection (RED) 122 packet scheduling algorithm. 123 124 See the top of <file:net/sched/sch_red.c> for more details. 125 126 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 127 module will be called sch_red. 128 129config NET_SCH_SFB 130 tristate "Stochastic Fair Blue (SFB)" 131 ---help--- 132 Say Y here if you want to use the Stochastic Fair Blue (SFB) 133 packet scheduling algorithm. 134 135 See the top of <file:net/sched/sch_sfb.c> for more details. 136 137 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 138 module will be called sch_sfb. 139 140config NET_SCH_SFQ 141 tristate "Stochastic Fairness Queueing (SFQ)" 142 ---help--- 143 Say Y here if you want to use the Stochastic Fairness Queueing (SFQ) 144 packet scheduling algorithm. 145 146 See the top of <file:net/sched/sch_sfq.c> for more details. 147 148 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 149 module will be called sch_sfq. 150 151config NET_SCH_TEQL 152 tristate "True Link Equalizer (TEQL)" 153 ---help--- 154 Say Y here if you want to use the True Link Equalizer (TLE) packet 155 scheduling algorithm. This queueing discipline allows the combination 156 of several physical devices into one virtual device. 157 158 See the top of <file:net/sched/sch_teql.c> for more details. 159 160 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 161 module will be called sch_teql. 162 163config NET_SCH_TBF 164 tristate "Token Bucket Filter (TBF)" 165 ---help--- 166 Say Y here if you want to use the Token Bucket Filter (TBF) packet 167 scheduling algorithm. 168 169 See the top of <file:net/sched/sch_tbf.c> for more details. 170 171 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 172 module will be called sch_tbf. 173 174config NET_SCH_GRED 175 tristate "Generic Random Early Detection (GRED)" 176 ---help--- 177 Say Y here if you want to use the Generic Random Early Detection 178 (GRED) packet scheduling algorithm for some of your network devices 179 (see the top of <file:net/sched/sch_red.c> for details and 180 references about the algorithm). 181 182 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 183 module will be called sch_gred. 184 185config NET_SCH_DSMARK 186 tristate "Differentiated Services marker (DSMARK)" 187 ---help--- 188 Say Y if you want to schedule packets according to the 189 Differentiated Services architecture proposed in RFC 2475. 190 Technical information on this method, with pointers to associated 191 RFCs, is available at <http://www.gta.ufrj.br/diffserv/>. 192 193 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 194 module will be called sch_dsmark. 195 196config NET_SCH_NETEM 197 tristate "Network emulator (NETEM)" 198 ---help--- 199 Say Y if you want to emulate network delay, loss, and packet 200 re-ordering. This is often useful to simulate networks when 201 testing applications or protocols. 202 203 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module 204 will be called sch_netem. 205 206 If unsure, say N. 207 208config NET_SCH_DRR 209 tristate "Deficit Round Robin scheduler (DRR)" 210 help 211 Say Y here if you want to use the Deficit Round Robin (DRR) packet 212 scheduling algorithm. 213 214 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module 215 will be called sch_drr. 216 217 If unsure, say N. 218 219config NET_SCH_MQPRIO 220 tristate "Multi-queue priority scheduler (MQPRIO)" 221 help 222 Say Y here if you want to use the Multi-queue Priority scheduler. 223 This scheduler allows QOS to be offloaded on NICs that have support 224 for offloading QOS schedulers. 225 226 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module will 227 be called sch_mqprio. 228 229 If unsure, say N. 230 231config NET_SCH_CHOKE 232 tristate "CHOose and Keep responsive flow scheduler (CHOKE)" 233 help 234 Say Y here if you want to use the CHOKe packet scheduler (CHOose 235 and Keep for responsive flows, CHOose and Kill for unresponsive 236 flows). This is a variation of RED which trys to penalize flows 237 that monopolize the queue. 238 239 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 240 module will be called sch_choke. 241 242config NET_SCH_QFQ 243 tristate "Quick Fair Queueing scheduler (QFQ)" 244 help 245 Say Y here if you want to use the Quick Fair Queueing Scheduler (QFQ) 246 packet scheduling algorithm. 247 248 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module 249 will be called sch_qfq. 250 251 If unsure, say N. 252 253config NET_SCH_CODEL 254 tristate "Controlled Delay AQM (CODEL)" 255 help 256 Say Y here if you want to use the Controlled Delay (CODEL) 257 packet scheduling algorithm. 258 259 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module 260 will be called sch_codel. 261 262 If unsure, say N. 263 264config NET_SCH_FQ_CODEL 265 tristate "Fair Queue Controlled Delay AQM (FQ_CODEL)" 266 help 267 Say Y here if you want to use the FQ Controlled Delay (FQ_CODEL) 268 packet scheduling algorithm. 269 270 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module 271 will be called sch_fq_codel. 272 273 If unsure, say N. 274 275config NET_SCH_FQ 276 tristate "Fair Queue" 277 help 278 Say Y here if you want to use the FQ packet scheduling algorithm. 279 280 FQ does flow separation, and is able to respect pacing requirements 281 set by TCP stack into sk->sk_pacing_rate (for localy generated 282 traffic) 283 284 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module 285 will be called sch_fq. 286 287 If unsure, say N. 288 289config NET_SCH_HHF 290 tristate "Heavy-Hitter Filter (HHF)" 291 help 292 Say Y here if you want to use the Heavy-Hitter Filter (HHF) 293 packet scheduling algorithm. 294 295 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module 296 will be called sch_hhf. 297 298config NET_SCH_PIE 299 tristate "Proportional Integral controller Enhanced (PIE) scheduler" 300 help 301 Say Y here if you want to use the Proportional Integral controller 302 Enhanced scheduler packet scheduling algorithm. 303 For more information, please see 304 http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-pan-tsvwg-pie-00 305 306 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module 307 will be called sch_pie. 308 309 If unsure, say N. 310 311config NET_SCH_INGRESS 312 tristate "Ingress Qdisc" 313 depends on NET_CLS_ACT 314 ---help--- 315 Say Y here if you want to use classifiers for incoming packets. 316 If unsure, say Y. 317 318 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 319 module will be called sch_ingress. 320 321config NET_SCH_PLUG 322 tristate "Plug network traffic until release (PLUG)" 323 ---help--- 324 325 This queuing discipline allows userspace to plug/unplug a network 326 output queue, using the netlink interface. When it receives an 327 enqueue command it inserts a plug into the outbound queue that 328 causes following packets to enqueue until a dequeue command arrives 329 over netlink, causing the plug to be removed and resuming the normal 330 packet flow. 331 332 This module also provides a generic "network output buffering" 333 functionality (aka output commit), wherein upon arrival of a dequeue 334 command, only packets up to the first plug are released for delivery. 335 The Remus HA project uses this module to enable speculative execution 336 of virtual machines by allowing the generated network output to be rolled 337 back if needed. 338 339 For more information, please refer to http://wiki.xensource.com/xenwiki/Remus 340 341 Say Y here if you are using this kernel for Xen dom0 and 342 want to protect Xen guests with Remus. 343 344 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 345 module will be called sch_plug. 346 347comment "Classification" 348 349config NET_CLS 350 boolean 351 352config NET_CLS_BASIC 353 tristate "Elementary classification (BASIC)" 354 select NET_CLS 355 ---help--- 356 Say Y here if you want to be able to classify packets using 357 only extended matches and actions. 358 359 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 360 module will be called cls_basic. 361 362config NET_CLS_TCINDEX 363 tristate "Traffic-Control Index (TCINDEX)" 364 select NET_CLS 365 ---help--- 366 Say Y here if you want to be able to classify packets based on 367 traffic control indices. You will want this feature if you want 368 to implement Differentiated Services together with DSMARK. 369 370 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 371 module will be called cls_tcindex. 372 373config NET_CLS_ROUTE4 374 tristate "Routing decision (ROUTE)" 375 depends on INET 376 select IP_ROUTE_CLASSID 377 select NET_CLS 378 ---help--- 379 If you say Y here, you will be able to classify packets 380 according to the route table entry they matched. 381 382 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 383 module will be called cls_route. 384 385config NET_CLS_FW 386 tristate "Netfilter mark (FW)" 387 select NET_CLS 388 ---help--- 389 If you say Y here, you will be able to classify packets 390 according to netfilter/firewall marks. 391 392 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 393 module will be called cls_fw. 394 395config NET_CLS_U32 396 tristate "Universal 32bit comparisons w/ hashing (U32)" 397 select NET_CLS 398 ---help--- 399 Say Y here to be able to classify packets using a universal 400 32bit pieces based comparison scheme. 401 402 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 403 module will be called cls_u32. 404 405config CLS_U32_PERF 406 bool "Performance counters support" 407 depends on NET_CLS_U32 408 ---help--- 409 Say Y here to make u32 gather additional statistics useful for 410 fine tuning u32 classifiers. 411 412config CLS_U32_MARK 413 bool "Netfilter marks support" 414 depends on NET_CLS_U32 415 ---help--- 416 Say Y here to be able to use netfilter marks as u32 key. 417 418config NET_CLS_RSVP 419 tristate "IPv4 Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP)" 420 select NET_CLS 421 ---help--- 422 The Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) permits end systems to 423 request a minimum and maximum data flow rate for a connection; this 424 is important for real time data such as streaming sound or video. 425 426 Say Y here if you want to be able to classify outgoing packets based 427 on their RSVP requests. 428 429 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 430 module will be called cls_rsvp. 431 432config NET_CLS_RSVP6 433 tristate "IPv6 Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP6)" 434 select NET_CLS 435 ---help--- 436 The Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) permits end systems to 437 request a minimum and maximum data flow rate for a connection; this 438 is important for real time data such as streaming sound or video. 439 440 Say Y here if you want to be able to classify outgoing packets based 441 on their RSVP requests and you are using the IPv6 protocol. 442 443 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 444 module will be called cls_rsvp6. 445 446config NET_CLS_FLOW 447 tristate "Flow classifier" 448 select NET_CLS 449 ---help--- 450 If you say Y here, you will be able to classify packets based on 451 a configurable combination of packet keys. This is mostly useful 452 in combination with SFQ. 453 454 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 455 module will be called cls_flow. 456 457config NET_CLS_CGROUP 458 tristate "Control Group Classifier" 459 select NET_CLS 460 select CGROUP_NET_CLASSID 461 depends on CGROUPS 462 ---help--- 463 Say Y here if you want to classify packets based on the control 464 cgroup of their process. 465 466 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 467 module will be called cls_cgroup. 468 469config NET_CLS_BPF 470 tristate "BPF-based classifier" 471 select NET_CLS 472 ---help--- 473 If you say Y here, you will be able to classify packets based on 474 programmable BPF (JIT'ed) filters as an alternative to ematches. 475 476 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the module will 477 be called cls_bpf. 478 479config NET_EMATCH 480 bool "Extended Matches" 481 select NET_CLS 482 ---help--- 483 Say Y here if you want to use extended matches on top of classifiers 484 and select the extended matches below. 485 486 Extended matches are small classification helpers not worth writing 487 a separate classifier for. 488 489 A recent version of the iproute2 package is required to use 490 extended matches. 491 492config NET_EMATCH_STACK 493 int "Stack size" 494 depends on NET_EMATCH 495 default "32" 496 ---help--- 497 Size of the local stack variable used while evaluating the tree of 498 ematches. Limits the depth of the tree, i.e. the number of 499 encapsulated precedences. Every level requires 4 bytes of additional 500 stack space. 501 502config NET_EMATCH_CMP 503 tristate "Simple packet data comparison" 504 depends on NET_EMATCH 505 ---help--- 506 Say Y here if you want to be able to classify packets based on 507 simple packet data comparisons for 8, 16, and 32bit values. 508 509 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 510 module will be called em_cmp. 511 512config NET_EMATCH_NBYTE 513 tristate "Multi byte comparison" 514 depends on NET_EMATCH 515 ---help--- 516 Say Y here if you want to be able to classify packets based on 517 multiple byte comparisons mainly useful for IPv6 address comparisons. 518 519 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 520 module will be called em_nbyte. 521 522config NET_EMATCH_U32 523 tristate "U32 key" 524 depends on NET_EMATCH 525 ---help--- 526 Say Y here if you want to be able to classify packets using 527 the famous u32 key in combination with logic relations. 528 529 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 530 module will be called em_u32. 531 532config NET_EMATCH_META 533 tristate "Metadata" 534 depends on NET_EMATCH 535 ---help--- 536 Say Y here if you want to be able to classify packets based on 537 metadata such as load average, netfilter attributes, socket 538 attributes and routing decisions. 539 540 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 541 module will be called em_meta. 542 543config NET_EMATCH_TEXT 544 tristate "Textsearch" 545 depends on NET_EMATCH 546 select TEXTSEARCH 547 select TEXTSEARCH_KMP 548 select TEXTSEARCH_BM 549 select TEXTSEARCH_FSM 550 ---help--- 551 Say Y here if you want to be able to classify packets based on 552 textsearch comparisons. 553 554 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 555 module will be called em_text. 556 557config NET_EMATCH_CANID 558 tristate "CAN Identifier" 559 depends on NET_EMATCH && (CAN=y || CAN=m) 560 ---help--- 561 Say Y here if you want to be able to classify CAN frames based 562 on CAN Identifier. 563 564 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 565 module will be called em_canid. 566 567config NET_EMATCH_IPSET 568 tristate "IPset" 569 depends on NET_EMATCH && IP_SET 570 ---help--- 571 Say Y here if you want to be able to classify packets based on 572 ipset membership. 573 574 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 575 module will be called em_ipset. 576 577config NET_CLS_ACT 578 bool "Actions" 579 ---help--- 580 Say Y here if you want to use traffic control actions. Actions 581 get attached to classifiers and are invoked after a successful 582 classification. They are used to overwrite the classification 583 result, instantly drop or redirect packets, etc. 584 585 A recent version of the iproute2 package is required to use 586 extended matches. 587 588config NET_ACT_POLICE 589 tristate "Traffic Policing" 590 depends on NET_CLS_ACT 591 ---help--- 592 Say Y here if you want to do traffic policing, i.e. strict 593 bandwidth limiting. This action replaces the existing policing 594 module. 595 596 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 597 module will be called act_police. 598 599config NET_ACT_GACT 600 tristate "Generic actions" 601 depends on NET_CLS_ACT 602 ---help--- 603 Say Y here to take generic actions such as dropping and 604 accepting packets. 605 606 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 607 module will be called act_gact. 608 609config GACT_PROB 610 bool "Probability support" 611 depends on NET_ACT_GACT 612 ---help--- 613 Say Y here to use the generic action randomly or deterministically. 614 615config NET_ACT_MIRRED 616 tristate "Redirecting and Mirroring" 617 depends on NET_CLS_ACT 618 ---help--- 619 Say Y here to allow packets to be mirrored or redirected to 620 other devices. 621 622 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 623 module will be called act_mirred. 624 625config NET_ACT_IPT 626 tristate "IPtables targets" 627 depends on NET_CLS_ACT && NETFILTER && IP_NF_IPTABLES 628 ---help--- 629 Say Y here to be able to invoke iptables targets after successful 630 classification. 631 632 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 633 module will be called act_ipt. 634 635config NET_ACT_NAT 636 tristate "Stateless NAT" 637 depends on NET_CLS_ACT 638 ---help--- 639 Say Y here to do stateless NAT on IPv4 packets. You should use 640 netfilter for NAT unless you know what you are doing. 641 642 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 643 module will be called act_nat. 644 645config NET_ACT_PEDIT 646 tristate "Packet Editing" 647 depends on NET_CLS_ACT 648 ---help--- 649 Say Y here if you want to mangle the content of packets. 650 651 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 652 module will be called act_pedit. 653 654config NET_ACT_SIMP 655 tristate "Simple Example (Debug)" 656 depends on NET_CLS_ACT 657 ---help--- 658 Say Y here to add a simple action for demonstration purposes. 659 It is meant as an example and for debugging purposes. It will 660 print a configured policy string followed by the packet count 661 to the console for every packet that passes by. 662 663 If unsure, say N. 664 665 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 666 module will be called act_simple. 667 668config NET_ACT_SKBEDIT 669 tristate "SKB Editing" 670 depends on NET_CLS_ACT 671 ---help--- 672 Say Y here to change skb priority or queue_mapping settings. 673 674 If unsure, say N. 675 676 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 677 module will be called act_skbedit. 678 679config NET_ACT_CSUM 680 tristate "Checksum Updating" 681 depends on NET_CLS_ACT && INET 682 ---help--- 683 Say Y here to update some common checksum after some direct 684 packet alterations. 685 686 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the 687 module will be called act_csum. 688 689config NET_CLS_IND 690 bool "Incoming device classification" 691 depends on NET_CLS_U32 || NET_CLS_FW 692 ---help--- 693 Say Y here to extend the u32 and fw classifier to support 694 classification based on the incoming device. This option is 695 likely to disappear in favour of the metadata ematch. 696 697endif # NET_SCHED 698 699config NET_SCH_FIFO 700 bool 701