Hello, > From: ext garentsen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > I've got two ISP's providing me with 10 Mbit and 3 Mbit internet > access at home. I would like to set up my Linux (or any other OS) > firewall to distribute my load evenly between theese two.
As Paul said this is mainly routing issue. There are two possible solutions: First one (which is the 'correct' one) is to use BGP peering with ISP's. You probably don't have possibility to do this because ISP's are pretty picky with organizations they are peering with. And you should also have Autonomous System ID and be prepared to pay for this arrangement. In this case you could use any router capable of handling BGP (such as Cisco 72xx series) or Firewall like Nokia IP series (starting IP440). Other possibility is to use NAT for outbound connections (NATting to different address spaces) and dynamic DNS for inbound (actually it does not have to be dynamic). If someone likes to know how this really works I'm prepared to write something about it. This requires system capable of handling this and only implementation I am aware of is Stonegate firewall. I think that Rainfinity and Radware also have some stuff related to issue. rgds, Harri _______________________________________________ Firewalls mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.gnac.net/mailman/listinfo/firewalls
