It turns out that what I did was *slightly* different-- I wasn't specifying multiple default gateways, just adding rules to make a multi homed host behave properly on multiple subnets.
I think this should do the trick, though, in your case: http://kindlund.wordpress.com/2007/11/19/configuring-multiple-default-routes-in-linux/ YMMV -Aaron On Tue, Jun 26, 2012 at 1:18 PM, Aaron Knister <aaron.knis...@gmail.com>wrote: > You can do it with tagging and some ip commands. Let me see if I can dig > up my notes... > > Sent from my iPhone > > On Jun 26, 2012, at 1:09 PM, "Bill Watson" <b...@magicdigits.com> wrote: > > > Howdy Folks, > > I currently have eth1 configured on my LAN/24 and it uses a simple > router as > > the default gateway for web/ftp/ssh/etc. Life is good so far. > > Now I want to add eth0 configured on a WAN/27 and have it be an > independent > > path for web/ftp/ssh/etc. Sounded really simple until I found out it > wasn't. > > The eth0 configuration itself was simple enough. > > > > At this point, when I simply activate eth0 using the desktop GUI, my > trusty > > eth1 stops working. I *really* didn't expect that to happen. It *feels* > like > > it waits for some provocation on eth0 to start the problem. > > > > Does anyone have a RHEL specific Dual WAN monkey-see+do guide laying > around? > > I have found several, but they all ask for stuff that I don't have, for > > systems other than RHEL. I do have /etc/iproute2 which some of the > chatter > > thought critical. > > > > Thank you in advance, > > Bill Watson > > b...@magicdigits.com > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > rhelv5-list mailing list > > rhelv5-list@redhat.com > > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/rhelv5-list >
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