We have a fairly static network with about 8 subnets and roughly 5 different points of access to the outside world. We are using a Linux PC full of nics and doing strictly static routing. We have an application that the university needs access to at fiber speed, the hospital has access to the university and we have access to the hospital, so therefore we are routing to the university through the hospital (university <--> hospital <--> our office. Long story short we have asked the hospital to somewhat protect us from the university by implementing ACLs on their PIX, this gives the university access to our services but blocks my users from hitting the university's services since my router points all university traffic through the hospital. Now my question, I have tried to understand the policy routing built into Linux but keep beating my head against the wall due to my lack of brains. Here is what I have, I have a macro I run that has all my static routes listed, what I want to do is via command line, not a table, tell my traffic that to go to 150.216/16 go out our broadband connection not our hospital gateway.
University = 150.216.x.x network A = 10.1.x.x network B = 10.2.x.x hospital gw = 10.254.254.254 office Internet gw = 10.2.x.254 The university needs access to network A, network A never needs to access the internet only the university, network B needs to access the university but can not access it through the hospital due to firewall rules, it can only access it though my office internet gateway. Regards, Chris ____________________________________________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Everyone is raving about the all-new Yahoo! Mail beta. http://new.mail.yahoo.com -- TriLUG mailing list : http://www.trilug.org/mailman/listinfo/trilug TriLUG Organizational FAQ : http://trilug.org/faq/ TriLUG Member Services FAQ : http://members.trilug.org/services_faq/
