I've recently set up a test server running in a virtual machine on my computer so I can do such things as interactive debugging with XDebug. For the most part it's pretty sweet, but I've run into a snag when running multiple requests to the server at once from the same client.
The problem is that guest-host network connection doesn't really exist as a physical connection, so it will run as fast as the computer hardware will allow. This isn't usually a big issue, but I'm trying to implement APC file upload monitoring, and this requires an AJAX request to run in parallel to the file upload to monitor its performance. In the real world, the network would introduce lag and latency and suchlike, leaving enough unused bandwidth for the AjAX request to run in parallel with the file upload. However, in the test machine, the AJAX request can't fetch any data from the server until the upload is finished as there's absolutely no bandwidth left available to it.
Is it possible to set up some kind of bandwidth management in the virtual machine (in Apache, PHP or some Linux utility) that could limit the bandwidth available per HTTP request? For example so that each request is limited to 1mbps, but several requests can exist between the client and the server at the same time? I'm hoping that if this can be done it will allow the AJAX request to fetch its data while the upload is progressing instead of being stalled until the upload actually completes.
I tried a utility called IPRelay, but I don't seem able to get it to work, or at least not in a way that limits per request.