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 dual WAN router (in case they add a 3rd DSL line).
I've found some great articles on how to get the interfaces working with 2 default gateways (I used this: http://www.linuxquestions.org/linux/answers/Networking/Spanning_Multiple_DSL s) and that is all running fine. It alternates every few minutes which WAN port is used when I traceroute yahoo.com (which is fine) and everything is connecting fine from the router. However, I can't figure out how to get NAT running on the server for the 2 WAN ports for clients inside the LAN. I can NAT to 1 DSL, but that is useless.
What I am looking for is a tutorial in how to do this or a pointer to someone who can help. Anyone know of a resource for this?
Joe Johnson joe@sendjoeanemail.com
I dont see how the router can NAT to more than one ip-address. So you need one NAT-router per DSL-line. Now use your linux, without NAT, to distribute the traffic. Make a guess where most of your goes. Get some vague ip-address ranges and divide them. E.g. send all traffic to microsoft via router-1 and all traffic to cnn via router-2. Both your clients and your linux router dont know about the NAT. The routers, up to 500 of them :) dont know nothing except NAT. If your clients are in 192.168.xxx.xxx then it might be a good idea to put the NAT-routers in 10.xxx.xxx.1 No need for the routers to talk to eachother. Your linux router needs a virtual interface on say 10.xxx.xxx.2 to talk to each router. It would be good to have a real interface for each router to the linux and to have a separate one for your clients. But the linux is intelligent enough and those 1 MBit dsl lines are slowly enough that you can put everything together on one switch. No need to bother which line is which... 10 MBit is fast enough to the outside. Another aproach: Can you split your costumers into separate networks that dont talk to eachother? Then give each group its own NAT-router and give your servers two or more interfaces to make them part of both networks. You must put the routers in different networks of course, say 192.168.1.xxx and 192.168.2.xxx Use an http://www-03.ibm.com/servers/eserver/bladecenter/ Then you run one linux for each dsl-line. Those linuxes know how to route internally too. Now you simply distribute the clients between the linuxes. Dont ask the price. Your management will be delighted :) This solution will allow you some 8 dsl-lines. If you need more buy another bladecenter and connect them. Cheers Peter and Karin Dambier -- Peter and Karin Dambier The Public-Root Consortium Graeffstrasse 14 D-64646 Heppenheim +49(6252)671-788 (Telekom) +49(179)108-3978 (O2 Genion) +49(6252)750-308 (VoIP: sipgate.de) mail: peter@peter-dambier.de mail: peter@echnaton.serveftp.com http://iason.site.voila.fr