On Thu, 2008-07-24 at 12:26 -0400, Broekman, Maarten wrote:
> That's the default route for the system.  If you get rid of it, the
> system doesn't know how to communicate with anything that's not on one
> of the subnets that it is directly connected to.
> 
> The only thing you can do is set up static routes for each subnet that
> you want to have go over a specific network.

I believe what the OP is saying is that he would like two default
routes.  If traffic comes into eth0 from a non-local subnet, he'd like
the replies to go out eth0.  If traffic comes into eth2 from a non-local
subnet, he'd like the replies to go out eth2.

If his network contains hundreds of subnets and he's situated this host
somewhere in the middle, setting hundreds of static routes for eth0 and
hundreds for eth2 is not a manageable solution.

/Brian/

-- 
       Brian Long                             |       |
                                          . | | | . | | | .
                                              '       '
                                              C I S C O

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