On Cisco equipment you would enable Cisco Express Forwarding or CEF on the interfaces that you want to work together to provide for load balancing.
Hope this helps Lance ----- Original Message ----- From: "Steven Pierce" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "Glynn S. Condez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Wednesday, April 03, 2002 11:13 AM Subject: Re: Load Balancing Glynn, I have had the same question. I have not as of yet been able to find anyone that can tell me how it will work. I have been advised that CISCO has equipment that will allow this to work. Please let me know when you find out. Steven *********** REPLY SEPARATOR *********** On 4/2/2002 at 11:57 PM Glynn S. Condez wrote: >Hello guys, I know this is a very off topic but I believe that someone >will >help me with this. I have broadband wireless connection with a 64kbps >bandwidth on both different provider. Actually I dont have a cisco router >and I only use 1 wireless connection and the other one is for backup. The >wireless cable is directly connected to my linux box with a zebra installed >and do a simple routing. > >This linux stands as my router or gateway and below this is my servers. My >question is, if my links down I really need to switch to the backup >connection and change my default gw and some IPs. is it possible to use >both >connection so that I the other one dies the other one is still working? if >its possible, how do I do it? I dont have an idea pls help. > > >Best Regards, >Glynn > > > > >_______________________________________________ >Firewalls mailing list >[EMAIL PROTECTED] >http://lists.gnac.net/mailman/listinfo/firewalls _______________________________________________ Firewalls mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.gnac.net/mailman/listinfo/firewalls _______________________________________________ Firewalls mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.gnac.net/mailman/listinfo/firewalls
