This approach is just plain wrong. What you want is a linknet for each of
the 2 ip ranges.
I'm sorry but it seems you are missing some very basic understanding about
routing and networking.
What you need is a /30 network between your ISP and your pfSense router.
Then your isp needs to route the first /25 to the pfsense /30 ip. and the
same for the other one.

The actual loadbalancing has to be done on each unit connected to the
pfsense unit (i guess you want to have one ip from each range on every
server). Then you tell pfsense to use WAN as GW for the first /25 and OPT1
as GW for the second /25.

BTW: your logic about adding second ip range as proxy-arp are flawed, it
will never failover the way you think.

-lsf


On Nov 22, 2007 11:57 PM, Chris Bagnall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> > You cannot do this! And this is really a very very short answer of why
> > it doesn't work.
> > I don't think you're interested on internals of this just the quick
> answer.
>
> Actually, I kind of am. I'd be very interested to know why it can't work,
> if you don't mind explaining.
>
> Regards,
>
> Chris
> --
> C.M. Bagnall, Director, Minotaur I.T. Limited
> For full contact details visit http://www.minotaur.it
> This email is made from 100% recycled electrons
>
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