Spencer Agrees!!

>>> "Richardson,Tony" <[email protected]> 1/29/2009 2:25 PM >>>

Scott,
 
Are you still running the Packet Shaper as you were yesterday. Our internet 
performance sucks!
 
Thanks,
Tony
 

From:[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Scott Fosseen
Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2009 8:41 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [info-tech] Handling Internet

 

You can also use the Fortigate 60 Firewall.  It comes with Dual WAN support.  
Actually Jeremy may sell you a Fortigate 100.  Fort Dodge had a issue with the 
Load Balancing on the Fortigate, but it was due to all their web traffic going 
through an internal proxy.  The Fortigate logic would route all traffic from an 
 IP address to a single ISP to ensure there would be no problems at the remote 
end putting the packets back together.  

 

 

 

From:Richardson,Tony ( mailto:[email protected] ) 

Sent:Thursday, January 29, 2009 8:32 AM

To:[email protected] 

Subject:RE: [info-tech] Handling Internet

 

Thanks for your help. I will look into the Enhanced Sonicwall 3060
 

From:[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Pearson, Jeremy
Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2009 8:28 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: RE: [info-tech] Handling Internet

 
We have a 5 MB Ethernet connection from Frontier, our local telco, with 28 ip 
addressed on it.
 
 
 

From:[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Richardson,Tony
Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2009 8:20 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: RE: [info-tech] Handling Internet

 
Assuming AEA is one vendor who is the other?
 

From:[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Pearson, Jeremy
Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2009 8:07 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: RE: [info-tech] Handling Internet

 
Tony-
 
            We are currently using our Sonicwall 3060 with Enhanced Firmware to 
provide load balancing between two 5 MB circuits from two different Internet 
providers.  All works pretty well.  My only complaint is that once you do have 
a failover (for whatever reason) the Sonicwall will turn it off and work just 
as you think it should, until the circuit comes back up.  The only problem is 
that it will not start load balancing again over the failed link.  It still 
relies heavily on the link that stayed up, until you do a reboot of the 
firewall, and then everything goes back to normal.  It is not a big deal, and 
since it took care of the whole reason we installed it, I am fine with that.  
We just reboot the firewall at some point late in the day, and all returns to 
normal.  Not much to see, but feel free to run over and check it out, or ask 
any questions.
 
Jeremy
 
 
 

From:[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Richardson,Tony
Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2009 5:02 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: [info-tech] Handling Internet

 

Hello All,

 

As the internet becomes more critical to daily instructional needs such as the 
use of online applications how is everyone handling their internet failover. Is 
there anyone using two different vendors to provide internet failover? What 
hardware/software are you using for this?

 

Thanks,

Tony Richardson,

Technology Coordinator

Humboldt Community School District

[email protected] 

 

Reply via email to