How to limit network bandwidth on Linux

Last updated on September 22, 2020 by Dan Nanni

If you often run multiple networking applications on your Linux desktop, or share bandwidth among multiple computers at home, you will want to have a better control over bandwidth usage. Otherwise, when you are downloading a big file with a downloader, your interactive SSH session may become sluggish to the point where it's unusable. Or when you sync a big folder over Dropbox, your roommate may complain that video streaming at her computer gets choppy.

In this tutorial, I am going to describe two different ways to rate limit network traffic on Linux.

Rate Limit a Particular Application on Linux

One way to rate limit network traffic is to restrict the bandwidth consumed by a particular network application. This can be achieved via a command-line tool called trickle. The trickle command allows you to shape the traffic of a given program by pre-loading a rate-limited socket library at run-time. A nice thing about trickle is that it runs purely in user-space, meaning you don't need root privilege to restrict the bandwidth usage of a program. To be compatible with trickle, the program must use socket interface with no statically linked library. trickle can be handy when you want to rate limit a program which does not have a built-in bandwidth control functionality.

To install trickle on Ubuntu, Debian and their derivatives:

$ sudo apt-get install trickle

To install trickle on Fedora or CentOS/RHEL (with EPEL repository):

$ sudo yum install trickle

Basic usage of trickle is as follows. Simply put, you prepend trickle (with rate) in front of the command you are trying to run.

$ trickle -d <download-rate> -u <upload-rate> <command>

This will limit the download and upload rate of <command> to specified values (in KBytes/s).

For example, set the maximum upload bandwidth of your scp session to 100 KB/s:

$ trickle -u 100 scp backup.tgz alice@remote_host.com:

If you want, you can set the maximum download speed (e.g., 300 KB/s) of your Firefox browser by creating a custom launcher with the following command.

trickle -d 300 firefox %u

Finally, trickle can run in a daemon mode, where it can restrict the aggregate bandwidth usage of all running programs launched via trickle. To launch trickle as a daemon (i.e., trickled):

$ sudo trickled -d 1000

Once the trickled daemon is running in the background, you can launch other programs via trickle. If you launch one program with trickle, its maximum download rate is 1000 KB/s. If you launch another program with trickle, each of them will be rate limited to 500 KB/s, etc.

Rate Limit a Network Interface on Linux

Another way to control your bandwidth resource is to enforce bandwidth limit on a per-interface basis. This is useful when you are sharing your upstream Internet connection with someone else. Like anything else, Linux has a tool for you. A command-line tool named wondershaper exactly does that: rate-limit a network interface.

wondershaper is in fact a shell script which uses tc to define traffic shaping and QoS for a specific network interface. Outgoing traffic is shaped by being placed in queues with different priorities, while incoming traffic is rate-limited by packet dropping.

In fact, the stated goal of wondershaper is much more than just adding bandwidth cap to an interface. wondershaper tries to maintain low latency for interactive sessions such as SSH while bulk download or upload is going on. Also, it makes sure that bulk upload (e.g., Dropbox sync) does not suffocate download, and vice versa.

To install wondershaper on Ubuntu, Debian and their derivatives:

$ sudo apt-get install wondershaper

To install wondershaper on Fedora or CentOS/RHEL (with EPEL repository):

$ sudo yum install wondershaper

Basic usage of wondershaper is as follows.

$ sudo wondershaper <interface> <download-rate> <upload-rate>

For example, to set the maximum download/upload bandwidth for eth0 to 1000Kbit/s and 500Kbit/s, respectively:

$ sudo wondershaper eth0 1000 500

You can remove the rate limit by running:

$ sudo wondershaper clear eth0

If you are interested in how wondershaper works, you can read its shell script (located in /sbin/wondershaper).

Conclusion

In this tutorial, I introduced two different ways to control your bandwidth usages on Linux desktop, on per-application or per-interface basis. Both tools are extremely user-friendly, offering you a quick and easy way to shape otherwise unconstrained traffic. For those of you who want to know more about rate control on Linux, refer to the Linux bible.

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