nothing can go out through alias inetrface, alias is for input only.

so everything is going through physical interface like eth0
if you are forwarding packets, then your interface ip is ignored anyway.
(it is only used to translate ip to mac)
if you want to shape localy generated trafic, then source ip will depend on
what the user will chose,
since he can use any aliased ip of your server.

so simply ignore all virtual interaces imagine that you have none of them,


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Discussion Lists" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, April 08, 2004 11:59 PM
Subject: RE: [LARTC] First Post: Question on Ip Aliasing


Thank you for your response.  You confirmed what I understood
to be how
it works, but for some reason it isn't working like that, and I can't
understand why.  The alias gets assigned through heartbeat, during a
failover, but traffic routes through that alias as if there was no
shaping going on at all.  In other words it just isn't working the way
that it should be working.  I am not even sure where to look for
problems or errors.  I don't see how my configuration can be wrong
because it is shaping traffic just fine on the physical adapter . .. If
anyone can think of other suggestions, I would greatly appreciate it.

Thanks!

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jose Luis Domingo Lopez [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

> Sent: Thursday, April 08, 2004 8:12 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [LARTC] First Post: Question on Ip
Aliasing
>
> On Thursday, 08 April 2004, at 06:53:27 -0700, Discussion Lists
wrote:
>
> > I did a google search on this and didn't find exactly what
I was
> > looking for.  Suppose I have a machine that has an IP
alias
> eth0:0.  I
> > have set up HTB.init so that it properly throttles

> bandwidth on eth0,
> > however when I use eth0:0, it doesn't work.  I read

> elsewhere that it
> > should work at the PHYSICAL device layer, and should
therefore work
> > for both at once.  This is not happening though.  Just

> wanted to find
> > out if
> >
> I think that the '"'hack'"' of '"'alias
interfaces'"' in Linux has
> been one major source of conceptual problems with respect to

> Linux routing and the like in past years :-). I have always

> believed that it is much better to think of IP addresses in

> Linux as assigned to physical interfaces rather than
> associated to some kind of a virtual one.
>
> The '"'ip address show'"' command shows very clearly this
fact.
> Each interface has zero or more IP addresses assigned to it,

> and with '"'ip'"'
> you will never see '"'alias interfaces'"' again, because
this
> tool is modern enough to understand the fact. I encourage

> everyone to make the move to '"'ip'"' from old
'"'ifconfig'"' and
> related tools as soon as possible.
>
> In the '"'ip'"' world you just have physical (or not so
physical,
> like bond?
> or VLAN interfaces) interfaces and IP assigned to them. And

> when you want to refer to IP addresses, you just use them.

> And when you want to refer to interfaces, use the one you
need.
>
> Also, have a look at the Stef Coene's excellent KPTD
at:
> http://www.docum.org/stef.coene/qos/kptd/
>
> Couple the above diagram with the previous explanation about

> IP and interfaces and maybe all will now be simpler to
you.
>
> Greetings.
>
> --
> Jose Luis Domingo Lopez
> Linux Registered User #189436     Debian Linux Sid (Linux
2.6.5)
> _______________________________________________
> LARTC mailing list / [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> http://mailman.ds9a.nl/mailman/listinfo/lartc HOWTO: http://lartc.org/
>
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