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The address range represents the IP address for which you need to throttle the internet speed.
Port segments are limited to the speed of a specific port, so select all of them if you don't know.
The uplink is the upload speed, and the downlink is the speed. The minimum bandwidth is to ensure that the IP address and port can use at least so much bandwidth, and the maximum bandwidth is to limit the maximum bandwidth that can be used by the IP and port.
Just choose all of them. Mode, independent bandwidth means that you set the bandwidth that can be used by each IP, and sharing is the bandwidth that all the IPs you set together can only use.
It's a bit hard to set up. This is because you can only set one QoS rule on the interface.
Then I had to force the bandwidth of each machine.
The IP range must contain all IP addresses in the LAN
The port segment contains all ports, i.e. 1-65535
I choose all of the agreements.
Select Independent Bandwidth as the mode.
Upside 100 - 300 (because the unit is KB and not KB) downside 400 - 1000
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Set the maximum downlink rate to 512 kbs and the maximum uplink rate to 512 kbs
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How to set the network speed limit on the Tengda router:
1.The system is connected to a WiFi network.
2.Open a computer browser and enter the gateway IP address of the nameplate on the back of the router (generally, enter the gateway configuration interface.
3.Go to the DHCP client interface and use static assignment to bind the device with the assigned IP address to an IP address that is specifically used for rate limiting.
4.Enter the bandwidth control setting interface in the router advanced, enter the range of the IP address corresponding to the device that needs to limit the network speed, set the bandwidth limit, and click Enable.
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The maximum speed of 2m width is 256kb, and if you give someone 1 4, that is 64kb. You configure an IP address on your computer, set the IP address to and enter 64KB in the QoS settings on the router management interface. That's it.
This only limits his speed, and you can even use the full bandwidth when he's not using it.
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You just don't include your own IP, and the speed limits yourself depending on your requirements.
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It is recommended to do the following:
First of all, make sure that your own IP is not acquired by others.
Then set the IP address to bind the MAC address in the router.
About the speed limit. You can restrict others except your own IP.
It means that you don't need to set a speed limit, you just need to limit other people's specific methods:
Set the IP range to the range set by DHCP (except your own).
If you can, you can follow your settings, but don't include the router's own IP address.
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No, you have to set it according to your actual total network speed, and the unit is kbs, not kbps, so your speed limit parameter value is wrong, resulting in an invalid speed limit.