One easy hacked way is to use 2 gateways. That would of course need 2
firewalls.

 

 

From: Vermont Area Group of Unix Enthusiasts [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Rene Churchill
Sent: Tuesday, March 17, 2009 4:52 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Router recommendations

 


Hey gang,

I'm looking for some pointers/recommendations on how to setup a
router for an office to split/share bandwidth between two sources.
I know enough about networking to keep my internal network up
but I'm getting into deeper waters here.

Here's the scenario.  I'm in an office with a split T1 currently.  Half
phone, half data.  The office is growing, so the number of times the
pipe gets clogged during the day is increasing and it's getting annoying.
I've got to keep the static IP as we've got email, ftp and a couple of
minor web servers running.  The current firewall is a SmoothWall
Express v2 that Stan setup several years ago for us.

What I'd like to go is get a cable modem tied into the office to provide
some cheap bandwidth for the majority of our data needs during the day.
The servers have static internal IPs, the desktop PCs have dynamic IPs,
so they're easy to tell apart.

So, any suggestions on how to setup a firewall/router that will send the
traffic from the desktops out over the cable modem while letting the servers
have the T1 bandwidth?

Many thanks,
    Rene



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RenĂ© Churchill                         [email protected]
Geek Two                               802-244-7880 x527
Your Source for Local Information      http://www.wherezit.com
 

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