Thanks Michael for your answer!
I finally did it in a way simillar as you described. Marking pakets and
using nat. BUT everything start working great when I found a
little detail:
echo 0 /proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/eth1
/rp_filter
echo 0 /proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/eth2/rp_filter
Without this,
Both solutions mentioned in here seem to be overly complicated. All of this should be doable with just a proper routing setup. I recently setup multi-link routing and used mostly the info in
http://www.ssi.bg/~ja/nano.txt and the mpath2.sh script linked at http://www.ssi.bg/~ja/The one change I
sorry if I can't explain correctly what my problem is.What I need is to route traffic originated inside my lan by one ISP,and traffic coming from another ISP (mostly requests to machinesinside the lan)back by the same ISP.
The way I've found is by creating two diferent networks inside my lan.Those
Hi,
There is another way to do this, but I doubt that it is anymore
elegant than what you have right now. I have just completed this same
task and I can say that if I could have used your method - overlaying
another subnet -I would have done so since it's a cleaner solution in my
view.
I