I think this can be work.. I don't understand why two OS.

2010/1/16 Kahlil Erwin S. Talledo <kstall...@binarysalad.com>:
> Hello,
>
> I have tried doing this several time before and have spent quite a 
> significant time trying to accomplish what you are doing but in the long run, 
> running squid and have it loadbalanced through two wan connections in a 
> single machine is just too complicated or not possible as of the moment. What 
> I ended up doing is virtualize two machines in one box. Installing openbsd on 
> one VM to do the wan loadbalancing and another VM for squid (i used freebsd 
> on the squid VM) and just did internal networking to connect both. this would 
> introduce more latency though and i/o speed may be hampered. you can also 
> separate both services (squid, loadbalancing) on different physical machines.
>
> Cheers,
>
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> k a h l i l   e r w i n   t a l l e d o
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> On Jan 16, 2010, at 9:36 AM, mashenko shenua wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> Yes Squid it's running on same machine.. ¿Can you rewrite it?
>>
>> 2010/1/16 Stuart Henderson <s...@spacehopper.org>:
>>> On 2010/01/16 03:37, mashenko shenua wrote:
>>>> I'm trying to setup a Multiwan OpenBSD firewall. I need to use Squid
>>>> but I cannot setup with rdr and round-robin..
>>>
>>>> pass in on $int_if route-to \
>>>> { ($ext_if1 $ext_gw1), ($ext_if2 $ext_gw2) }  round-robin \
>>>> proto tcp from $lan_net to any port http
>>>
>>> Does squid run on the firewall itself? If so, this "pass in" rule
>>> will not apply; squid makes its own connection from the firewall,
>>> so the packet will be outbound (i.e. you would need a "pass out
>>> ... route-to {($ext_if1 $ext_gw1) ($ext_if2 $ext_gw2)}" rule).
>>>
>>>
>
>

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