Yes you can do this, all you need to pay attention to is that the servers are routed out one interface and the lan/clients are routed out another, this is a wery simple thing to do with pfsense. If you like you can also set up a DMZ for the servers and have them seperated from the clients. You can also select outgoing link based on service (so you can have SSH,VoIP and other latency sensitive traffic on one DSL link while haveing the rest on the other). Many options and pfsense supports all of them. A starting hint will be AON (Advanced Outbound Nat) and another will be the GW selection at the bottom of rules.
Take a look at the tutorials and read the forum, it has tons of info on dualwan setups. -lsf On Nov 23, 2007 4:51 AM, Victor Padro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hello listers! > > this is my first post about pfsense, just need some information to get > going with Pfsense, which seems a cool firewall/router distro to me! > > the thing is that i am considering using pfsense to do the next project: > > I got 8 windows/linux servers that my client uses on a daily basis, they > serve as exchange 2005 mail server, domain controller(user authentification) > ftp, web, ruby on rails, and some other stuff, the point is that my client > uses two broadband links ADSL(using DHCP from ISP) and cablemodem(which has > a public shared IP, DHCP also) i want to use the ADSL line to connect via > internet to the servers kinda DMZ, and use the cablemodem to surf within the > office, can this be done with pfsense? my first guess is yes it can be > done, but how can it be done, is there a guide to achieve this goal or at > least have the idea to do so? > Any help will be greatfully apreciated. > > Thank you. > > Victor. >
