1 The "quota2" implements a named counter which can be increased or decreased 2 on a per-match basis. Available modes are packet counting or byte counting. 3 The value of the counter can be read and reset through procfs, thereby making 4 this match a minimalist accounting tool. 5 .PP 6 When counting down from the initial quota, the counter will stop at 0 and 7 the match will return false, just like the original "quota" match. In growing 8 (upcounting) mode, it will always return true. 9 .TP 10 \fB\-\-grow\fP 11 Count upwards instead of downwards. 12 .TP 13 \fB\-\-no\-change\fP 14 Makes it so the counter or quota amount is never changed by packets matching 15 this rule. This is only really useful in "quota" mode, as it will allow you to 16 use complex prerouting rules in association with the quota system, without 17 counting a packet twice. 18 .TP 19 \fB\-\-name\fP \fIname\fP 20 Assign the counter a specific name. This option must be present, as an empty 21 name is not allowed. Names starting with a dot or names containing a slash are 22 prohibited. 23 .TP 24 [\fB!\fP] \fB\-\-quota\fP \fIiq\fP 25 Specify the initial quota for this counter. If the counter already exists, 26 it is not reset. An "!" may be used to invert the result of the match. The 27 negation has no effect when \fB\-\-grow\fP is used. 28 .TP 29 \fB\-\-packets\fP 30 Count packets instead of bytes that passed the quota2 match. 31 .PP 32 Because counters in quota2 can be shared, you can combine them for various 33 purposes, for example, a bytebucket filter that only lets as much traffic go 34 out as has come in: 35 .PP 36 \-A INPUT \-p tcp \-\-dport 6881 \-m quota \-\-name bt \-\-grow; 37 \-A OUTPUT \-p tcp \-\-sport 6881 \-m quota \-\-name bt; 38