<!DOCTYPE html><html><head><meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" /></head><body><html><body><div><div data-html-editor-font-wrapper="true" style="font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 13px;"> <signature></signature>Greetings people and robots,<br><br>I'm sending this email with a positive feed-back of my experience with WireGuard and the embedded device that I used with it, also I want to thank the WireGruard dev team for the awesome free software!<br><br>WireGuard is running on a Olimex Lime A-10 board with Debian Jessie on it:<br><br>lsb_release -a<br>No LSB modules are available.<br>Distributor ID: Debian<br>Description: Debian GNU/Linux 8.6 (jessie)<br>Release: 8.6<br>Codename: jessie<br><br>uname -a<br>Linux lime-a10 4.8.4-sunxi #6 SMP Sun Oct 23 15:55:47 CEST 2016 armv7l GNU/Linux<br><br>The WireGuard packages were installed from the sid repo, everything went smoothly without any manual intervention for the setup.<br><br>My initial idea was to use WireGuard as a open-vpn-type server-client setup.<br><br>After reading some of the mails from this list I was able to get two peers to talk to each other and after that is was a matter of iptables rules to get one of the peers to act as a 'exit server' and the other connected peers to it as 'clients'.<br><br>If anyone is interested in this set-up I can write a short guide how you can achieve that and other people can point if any mistakes were made during the setup.<br><br>Something that I want to do, and I was not able to find information about it in the mailing list or the docs on the website is, can bandwidth (traffic shaping) limits be applied between connected peers?<br><br>I have done this in the past with open-vpn and tc (per IP address shaping) and I am really curious if this can be done inside WireGuard or not?<br><br>With regards,<br>j0eblack</div></div></body></html></body></html>