I use a T1/26xx for primary and a sprint datacard in a little NAT router for secondary. The two boxes sit on the same LAN but provide different gateway IP addresses. The sprint router does the DHCP, so things that ask for DHCP wind up using that as the primary. Some boxes use the 26xx as default gateway with static IP's outside the DHCP range. A smart enough box could choose paths per conversation by playing with the next hop. If that active path for a box fails I can just change it's default gateway to switch to the other service. I have a routable C I use for the LAN, the sprint connections just NAT's it anyway, the other connection is firewalled but not NAT'd. Seems to work ok for me. Could be made fancier. On Wed, Dec 30, 2009 at 11:53 AM, Brandon Galbraith < brandon.galbraith@gmail.com> wrote:
On Wed, Dec 30, 2009 at 10:46 AM, Ken Chase <math@sizone.org> wrote:
2x DSL not so backhoe-resistant.
I like mixing cable with dsl. Tasty disparate paths (modulo garden shears applied to the single ingres point to your basement) if not technologies, orgs and methodologies. Or radio + dsl, or pigeon + mule, take your pick.
*snip*
I'm using cable and wimax in the Chicago suburbs with a dual-wan router. Works well, would recommend to others, and so forth.
/kc
Do you control or have access to the provider side-the PPPoE server-and would both PPPoE connections hit the same PPPoE server at the provider? If so, I recommend setting up a PPP multilink with both DSL lines. The DSL
On Wed, Dec 30, 2009 at 11:12:59AM -0500, Tim Sanderson's said: provider would have to support that capability. I also recommend something like a Cisco 2691 router with two WIC-1ADSL cards. I have used this hardware for a 2xDSL multilink to my own home and it worked well.
-- Tim
-----Original Message----- From: Paul Bennett [mailto:paul.w.bennett@gmail.com] Sent: Wednesday, December 30, 2009 10:50 AM To: nanog@nanog.org Subject: Consumer-grade dual-homed connectivity options?
Not sure whether this is an appropriate place to post this, but I
I'd give it a shot, since you're all knowledgeable folks with regard to networking things...
At home, I currently run two DSL lines. Right now, we just have two separate LANs, one connected to each line, with my wife's devices attached to one, and my devices attached to the other. For a while now, I've been thinking about setting up a load-balancing routing solution to give both of us access to both lines.
I have the opportunity to acquire a refurbed Cisco Catalyst 2960 at a ridiculously low price. I also have access to a (nominally) spare quad-core 64-bit PC with 8GB of RAM. I say "nominally" because I'm thinking about setting it up as a media center / gaming rig connected to the TV in the den. That's largely beside the point, but it bears
out that keeping the PC available for my other needs would be a good
thought pointing thing.
So.
Is it going to be a more-effective solution to drop a few bucks on the 2960 and go through the hassle of learning how to set it up (and then setting it up), or would I be better off putting a secured Linux distro (e.g. gentoo-hardened, or something) on the semi-spare PC and running
load-balancing via iproute2 and friends?
Either way, I'm looking at a learning curve, and a good amount of time fannying around getting the damn thing working -- there's a good chance I'd spend almost as much cash on the PC-based solution getting good-quality network cards, and maybe fast HDD tech (though it seems
the like
RAM and cores would be more important than disk IO).
What are your opinions?
-- Paul
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