Provided by: trickle_1.08+ds-1.1_amd64 bug

NAME

       trickle — a lightweight userspace bandwidth shaper

SYNOPSIS

       trickle  [-h]  [-v] [-V] [-s] [-d rate[:schedule]] [-u rate[:schedule]] [-w length] [-t time] [-l length]
               [-n path] command ...

DESCRIPTION

       trickle is a userspace bandwidth manager.  Currently, trickle supports the  shaping  of  any  SOCK_STREAM
       (see  socket(2))  connection established via the socket(2) interface.  Furthermore, trickle will not work
       with statically linked executables, nor with setuid(2)  executables.   trickle  is  highly  configurable;
       download and upload rates can be set separately, or in an aggregate fashion.

       The options are as follows:

       -h           Displays help.

       -v           Increases the verbosity level (can be specified multiple times).

       -V           Prints version.

       -s           Runs trickle in standalone mode, independent of trickled(8).

       -d rate[:schedule]
                    Limit  the  download  bandwidth  consumption  to  rate  KB/s.  The default value is 10 KB/s.
                    Optionally, set a schedule to follow.

       -u rate[:schedule]
                    Limit the upload bandwidth  consumption  to  rate  KB/s.  The  default  value  is  10  KB/s.
                    Optionally, set a schedule to follow.

       -w length    Set  peak  detection window size to length KB.  This determines how aggressive trickle is at
                    eliminating bandwidth consumption peaks.  Lower values will be more aggressive, but may also
                    result in over shaping.  The default value (512 KB) is usually sufficient.

       -t seconds   Set smoothing time to seconds s.  The smoothing time determines with what intervals  trickle
                    will  try  to  let  the  application  transcieve data.  Smaller values will result in a more
                    continuous (smooth) session, while larger values may  produce  bursts  in  the  sending  and
                    receiving  data.   Smaller  values  (0.1 - 1 s) are ideal for interactive applications while
                    slightly larger values (1 - 10 s) are better for applications that need bulk transfer.   The
                    default value is 3 seconds.

       -l length    Set  smoothing  length  to  length  KB.  The smoothing length is a fallback of the smoothing
                    time.  If trickle cannot meet the requested smoothing time, it will  instead  fall  back  on
                    sending length KB of data.  The default value is 10 KB.

       -n path      Use    trickled(8)   socket   path   to   communicate   with   trickled(8).    By   default,
                    /tmp/.trickled.sock is used.

   Schedules
       Both the -u and -d flags accept one or more optional schedules, specified in the following form:

       :[days_of_week][start_time],[end_time],[rate]

       days_of_week may be any of Su M T W Th F Sa in any order.  If no day  is  specified,  the  schedule  will
       apply for all days.

       start_time is the 3-or-4-digit 24-hour local time to begin the new bandwidth schedule.  For example, 1234
       would mean 12:34 PM.  123 would mean 1:23 AM.  2345 would mean 11:45 PM.

       end_time is the 3-or-4-digit 24-hour local time to end the bandwidth schedule.

       rate is the bandwidth limit (in KB/s) that is enforced during the specified time.

       Multiple  schedules  can  be string together on the command line.  If the schedules overlap, the last one
       takes precident.

EXAMPLES

       trickle -u 10 -d 20 ncftp

       Launch ncftp(1) limiting its upload capacity to 10 KB/s, and download capacity at 20 KB/s.

       trickle -d 50 -u 10:WSaSu130,145,1000:MTTh1200,300,96 rsync ...

       Launch rsync(1) limiting the bandwidth as follows:

          constant 50 KB/s download limit

          1000 KB/s upload limit between 1:30 AM and 1:45 AM on Wednesdays, Saturdays, and Sundays

          96 KB/s upload limit between 12:00 noon and 3:00 PM on Mondays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays

          10 KB/s upload limit otherwise

       trickle -s -u 100 -d 10000:900,1700,10" wget ...

       Launch wget(1) in standalone mode, limiting the bandwidth as follows:

          constant 100 KB/s upload limit

          10 KB/s download limit between 9:00 AM and 5:00 PM all days of the week

          10,000 KB/s download limit otherwise

SEE ALSO

       trickled(8), syslog(3), socket(2), netintro(4)

AUTHORS

       trickle has been developed by Marius Aamodt Eriksen ⟨marius@monkey.org⟩.

BUGS

       Does not support executables utilizing kqueue(2).  Does not support statically linked executables.

Debian                                          November 10, 2002                                     TRICKLE(1)