Assuming your providers give you a new modem which is already NAT'ing
the LAN side of the modem and you are plugging that into multiple NIC's
on your linux router like;
-modem-pub -> modem-priv -> linux-eth0
-modem-pub -> modem-priv -> linux-eth1
-linux-eth3 -> LAN switch
1) Configure V
Joe -
Linux can do this, check out:
http://www.lartc.org/
More specifically:
http://www.lartc.org/howto/lartc.rpdb.multiple-links.html and
http://www.ssi.bg/~ja/#routes
I am working on a redhat project that requires QoS over multiple VLAN's.
I was reading up on tc and imq devices when I came
On 12/14/05, Joe Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I've been trying over and over to figure this one out, but I'm just hitting
> the end of my wits. We have a remote office that can only get 768Kbps DSL,
> which they've not totally maxed out. So management's solution now is to buy
> a second
Rodney Dunn wrote:
On Thu, Dec 15, 2005 at 08:33:55AM -0600, eric wrote:
[ This is not a plug for a vendor, just operational experience ]
On Thu, 2005-12-15 at 10:49:51 +0100, Peter Dambier proclaimed...
I dont see how the router can NAT to more than one ip-address. So you need
one NAT-rou
On Thu, Dec 15, 2005 at 08:33:55AM -0600, eric wrote:
>
> [ This is not a plug for a vendor, just operational experience ]
>
> On Thu, 2005-12-15 at 10:49:51 +0100, Peter Dambier proclaimed...
>
> > I dont see how the router can NAT to more than one ip-address. So you need
> > one NAT-router pe
On Dec 15, 2005, at 06:54, Rossi, Jeremy wrote:
Have you looked OpenBSD with pf? You can create rules that map
outbound
session to a different DSL router, interface, and/or gateway based on
any number of rules. The man page pf.conf[1] and more precisely the
FreeBSD with IPF \ IPNAT [1]
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> I've been trying over and over to figure this one out, but I'm just
> hitting
> the end of my wits. We have a remote office that can only get 768Kbps
DSL,
> which they've not totally maxed out. So management's solution now is
to
> buy
>
[ This is not a plug for a vendor, just operational experience ]
On Thu, 2005-12-15 at 10:49:51 +0100, Peter Dambier proclaimed...
> I dont see how the router can NAT to more than one ip-address. So you need
> one NAT-router per DSL-line.
I have some experience with the Xincom Twin WAN router.
Joe Johnson wrote:
I've been trying over and over to figure this one out, but I'm just hitting
the end of my wits. We have a remote office that can only get 768Kbps DSL,
which they've not totally maxed out. So management's solution now is to buy
a second DSL line, but they won't let me buy a d