You do not need Advanced Outbound NAT.

In your firewall rules , on the LAN interface change the default rule
so that the gateway is your pool. This will load balance your traffic.

Take a look at http://doc.pfsense.org/index.php/Multi-Wan/Load-Balancing
- this is a recently updated doc and will help.

sai

On 7/5/07, William Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi,
I have 3 WANS. Each has a static ip assigned by the ISP based on login. I
have the router/modems set to login and give each of my WAN interfaces an
IP. 192.168.2.10, 192.168.1.10 and 192.168.0.10. (I also DMZed those IPs in
the router/modems so that I can do NAT with pfsense) I setup a pool in load
balancer to point to the ips of the router/modems, 192.168.2.1, 192.168.1.1
and 192.168.0.1. These show up as "online" in the load balace status. Now
this is where I am stuck. I enable advanced outbound nat, and at this point
I need some definitive instruction. I have read the "load balace" pdf but I
must be missing something. I know I need rules but I am totally confused.
Thanks in advance for any help or pointers. Oh, in addition my LAN is
10.20.100.0/24 and as long as I leave advanced outbound nat off, I get
traffic through one of the WANS. And by the way, we could never afford the
"appliance" to do this, pfsense is great for non profit orgs like our
library, keep up the EXCELLENT work. This thing is awsome.

Best Regards,
Bill
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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