I have been collecting statistics on the behavior of the 3.7.5-2 version of cerowrt, and perhaps y'all out there can help. I've been doing four repeatable tests. I feed the attached file into the chrome web page benchmark and run it 4 times: 1) No other load on the system 2) while running a single up and single down netperf stream to icei.org (on the east coast) 3) then while still loaded, after turning on simple_qos.sh, set for ~85% of the rated up/down bandwidth... 4) then killing the load, and keeping simple_qos enabled. I export each detailed (you have to select it) .csv output from that benchmark to a file. I do it against a bidirectional stream - one each of netperf -l 6000 -4 -H icei.org -t TCP_MAERTS & netperf -l 6000 -4 -H icei.org -t TCP_STREAM & (if you have ipv6, more power to you, kill the -4. ) then starting the web tests 10-20 seconds later. It's interesting to watch cero's bandwidth graphs while doing this. There are netperf servers setup on the east (icei.org) and west coast ( snapon.lab.bufferbloat.net) and a few other places. It would be sane to setup your own someplace you control (from netperf's svn compiled with --enable-demo), as it helps to have a shorter RTT to truly load up the link. You can also run the rrul test (preferably for 5 minutes or more because this test idea KILLs web page load times) to get a heavier load and more graphs. If you are up to trying this test series, please let me know, send along the details of your setup, and the 4 csv files, and perhaps your data will show up in an upcoming paper. The chrome web page benchmark can be had at: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/page-benchmarker/channimfdomahekjcahlbpccbgaopjll?hl=en And requires you fire off chrome with --enable-benchmarking You can use the version of netperf on cerowrt to generate the load if you like, but rrul doesn't run on that. Latest version of rrul is at https://github.com/tohojo/netperf-wrapper -- Dave Täht Fixing bufferbloat with cerowrt: http://www.teklibre.com/cerowrt/subscribe.html