Thanks for the advice, yes it's on a linux box.
Though i have both IPs coming from the same Router.
and not connected to a public ISP.
routing is done on the routers side..
In other terms if i understood your advice correctly i'll do the following:
IPs assigned to Squid box:
192.168.1.X #primary IP
192.168.1.y #secondary IP
Squid:
acl Subnet#1 src 192.168.1.0/24
acl Subnet#2 src 192.168.2.0/24
tcp_outgoing_address 192.168.1.x Subnet#1
tcp_outgoing_address 192.168.1.y Subnet#2
Router:
src Subnet#1 dst ISP#1
src Subnet#2 dst ISP#2
Would the above setup work ?
i've read about a sort of persistent connections problem, any advice about that?
Thanks for your help,
--Roland
> Assuming you are using Linux , first you have to create proper routing
> table for both ISPs , linking each IP to its gateway. Once you are
> done with that , you can use tcp_outgoing_address in squid to redirect
> each subnet is IPs to the proper ISP.
On Wed, Jun 1, 2011 at 10:40 AM, Roland Roland<r_o_l_a_..._at_hotmail.com> wrote:
>
> Dear all,
>
> I have one squid that's running two subnets (different delay-pools) on one
> ISP.
> Requirement has changed, the new scenario is as such:
>
> Subnet #1 goes from ISP#1
> Subnet #2 goes through ISP#2
>
> To do so should i have to create a secondary Squid or is there a way i could
> do so from one machine?
>
> At a first thought i'm thinking of setting two IPs on that specific Squid
> with those IPs going through the different ISPs i want.
> Where i direct the users coming from Subnet #1 to IP#1(which is routed to
> ISP#1) and Subnet #2 to IP#2(which is routed to ISP#2) using a PAC file.
>
> Any idea if this would work, or a possible better idea?
>
> Thanks,
>
> --Roland
Received on Thu Jun 02 2011 - 05:29:48 MDT
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