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Ok, I am trying to tweak my router to give priority to some traffic. My classifications seem to cover just about everything but I still see ~60 to ~80% of the traffic as unclassified:
TCP 192.168.1.100 64137 192.168.1.1 80 Unclassified
TCP 192.168.1.100 64175 192.168.1.1 80 Unclassified
TCP 192.168.1.100 64144 192.168.1.1 443 Unclassified
I assume that the 64### ports are just what my WAP uses to send packets inside my home network. But my classifications seems to cover any traffic for destination ports 80 and 443: (partial list)
TCP Dst Port: 80,443 High WWW
TCP/UDP Dst Port: 1024-65535 Lowest Bulk Traffic
Why do I have so much unclassified traffic if I have a classification that should cover it?
I think the difference is that "normal" inbound traffic is the inbound portion of an outgoing connection. So if you're PC starts a connection, it will be classified. If the connection is initiated from the outside to your PC, it will not be classified. I guess you have to distinguish between "incoming connections" and "inbound traffic". Every connection has inbound and outbound traffic, but not all connections are incoming. – Boris – 2014-10-12T06:24:52.537