User Guide
APconnections, Inc. // 303.997.1300 // www.netequalizer.com
Page 24 of 120
rev. 20170131
© 2014-2017 APconnections, Inc. All Rights Reserved
version 8.4
Configure Hard Limits batch entry screen, you can move to the
Quick Edit Hard Limits
screen, to add or delete Hard Limit Rules without having to restart equalizing. Quick
Edit cannot be used to modify rules.
Hard Limit Rules
Before creating Hard Limits, it is important for you to understand several rules that apply.
A Hard Limited IP cannot also be in a Bandwidth Pool
Once you put a Hard Limit on an IP address, you cannot also have that IP address exist
within a Bandwidth Pool. An IP address either has a fixed amount of bandwidth (Hard Limit)
or shared bandwidth (Bandwidth Pools), but not both. See
Bandwidth Pools
to determine
which option is right for your needs.
Override Hard Limit for an IP in a subnetted Hard Limit Range
You can set a Subnet Hard Limit, which applies to an entire set of IPs, such as a /24 or /16,
and also set an
override hard limit for an individual IP in that range.
It is important that the
Subnet Hard Limit base address does NOT match the override individual IP.
For example, this is allowed:
Subnet Hard Limit = 10.1.1.0 /24
Override Hard Limit = 10.1.1.143 /32
This is NOT allowed:
Subnet Hard Limit = 10.1.1.143 /24
Override Hard Limit = 10.1.1.143 /32
When setting up Subnet Hard Limits, we recommend using .0 for the base address. This
means that you can have override Hard Limits for any IP except 10.1.1.0 (using our
example). This should not be a problem, as DHCP does not usually assign out .0 in
common practice.
Hard Limiting an External IP address
As of Software Update 8.4, you can assign a Hard Limit to an IP address that physically sits
on the WAN side of the NetEqualizer. For example, you can put a Hard Limit on an Internet
site that is used to host video. This is useful in conjunction with setting Priority Traffic, for
cases where you want your hosted video to not be equalized, but do not want it to run
completely unrestricted. For example, you could set a hard limit of 20Mbps Up/Down, so
that your hosted video could only consume a maximum of 20Mbps of your network pipe.
Tuning for a Large Number of Subnetted Hard Limits
If you plan to set up a large number of subnet-ranged Hard Limits (>=32 subnet ranges),
you will need to set several tuning parameters. Please see
Appendix #5
for detailed
instructions.