Isn't this what MPLS-TE is for? Or what about the AirFiber NxN thingamajig?
On 12/6/2016 1:49 PM, Gilbert T. Gutierrez, Jr. wrote:
You can mark specific IP blocks in a Mangle Rule via a routing mark.
Then use a static route (That checks the gateway) that routes on that
routing mark. If the link is down, OSPF takes over.
I do this on a couple of links where I have a higher cost on a low
speed link. As long as the link is up, I route specific traffic
through it with routing marks. If it goes down, everything goes
through the primary. If the primary goes down the low speed link picks
up all traffic. Pretty easy to do with address lists and Mangle Rules.
Gilbert
On 12/6/2016 9:33 AM, Paul McCall wrote:
Did get to finish this�
�
*From:* Af [mailto:[email protected]] *On Behalf Of *Paul McCall
*Sent:* Tuesday, December 6, 2016 11:32 AM
*To:* [email protected]
*Subject:* [AFMUG] Splitting Network Traffic in an OSPF enviroment
�
We have a �feed tower� that feeds several other towers (some
directly, some a hop or 2 away) and its main BH (AirFiber 5x) is
nearing capacity.� All 3.65 spectrum is used up, and same with 5
Ghz.� The secondary that sits largely unused (non-preferred OSPF
path) has about 100Mbit capacity and we would like to somehow split
our load from the feed tower.�� All the �subtowers� are on
their own subnet(s) all running OSPF on a Mikrotik at each tower.
�
OSPF pretty much is all or nothing when picking a path.� There has
to be a simple way of making this work.
�
Paul
�
�
�
Paul McCall, President
PDMNet, Inc. / Florida Broadband, Inc.
658 Old Dixie Highway
Vero Beach, FL 32962
772-564-6800�
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
www.pdmnet.com <http://www.pdmnet.com>
www.floridabroadband.com <http://www.floridabroadband.com>
�
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