Of course it can work. My point is that it is a fact of life,
nothing more.
Pointing out the obvious: Dependent upon who is/are your upstream
provider(s), and how specific the prefix announcements are made
to their peers (re: your reachability) determines just how symmetric
your traffic patterns will be.
- ferg
-- "Michel Py" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Asymmetric paths are a fact of life in the Internet.
Not for enterprise operators except the largest ones. Asymmetric traffic
does happen in the core, where there are no firewalls or NATs; as far as
the edge is concerned though I know several companies that multihome to
two or more ISPs but only in one location, largely because they don't
want to deal with NAT/firewall issues. Although it can work, it requires
extra engineering and most of the time a fat pipe to replicate state
information between the sites.
--
"Fergie", a.k.a. Paul Ferguson
Engineering Architecture for the Internet
[EMAIL PROTECTED] or
[EMAIL PROTECTED]