Oops, indeed. I was thinking multi server behind pfSense load balancing. Yes, what Sean says is correct. May want to make sure your server is not the bottleneck as well. I've been /.'d 4 times now and I have been really lucky so far.
On 12/5/06, Sean Cavanaugh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
he was asking about the WAN connections themselves being load-balanced in. I'm assuming he only has the one server and that his bottleneck was just the bandwidth. DNS round Robin is still the better answer fir his problem. -Sean ________________________________ > Date: Tue, 5 Dec 2006 12:22:55 -0500 > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > To: [email protected] > Subject: Re: [pfSense Support] pfsense load balancing question > > On 12/5/06, Jonathan Horne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > last night, a site i admin for got slashdotted. the site owner wants to > > put in another business cable line, but the ISP is unable to bond them > > into a single double speed connection. > > > > our firewall is pfsense 1.0.1. could we use pfsense's load blancing > > features to balance inbound httpd connetions across 2 connections? i was > > always under the impression that the load balancing was to serve the > > internal users going outbound. > > Yes, this works fine.. Please check out > http://wiki.pfsense.com/wikka.php?wakka=IncomingLoadBalancing for a > quick howto guide. > > Scott > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > ________________________________ Check the weather nationwide with MSN Search Try it now!
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