-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Hi again.
Let me explain the situation here, and then I'll tell the problem. I'm wondering if it can be solved using squid or not. We have one machine here at work that connects to the internet. We have two internet links, on different interfaces (with different IPs, of course). Before using squid, our Cisco would check from which interface the data came, and would send it through the right link (NAT'ing the address). The right link is hard coded inside the Cisco (like, networks 1 and 2 go through link A and networks 3 and 4 go through link B). With the advent of installing squid, a big problem was introduced. The requests no longer come from the network themselves, but come from the machine hosting squid. And so, they all go through the same link. I'm wondering if I can make squid send its requests through different interfaces depending on the source address, or if I'll have to solve this problem on a lower layer. Hope you understand the problem. Thank you. - -- Bruno Lustosa, aka Lofofora | Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Network Administrator/Web Programmer | ICQ: 1406477 Rio de Janeiro - Brazil | -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.4 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFAYwcsiNfNvfQ8L5IRAq9WAJ90KhKeOIlDceZxx/5fjYIErRhyxACgg2TD VnoVDFJs7Xdy/PZJ3UGODNk= =mfdc -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
