At 01:18 AM 9/12/2004 -0400, Charles Swiger wrote:
On Sep 11, 2004, at 9:41 PM, Bob Ababurko wrote:
I have two networks that are routed to me via a serial connection, namely a T1. I have just installed a new router and it has two ethernet ports that will route to the two different networks. What I want to do is have a single machine have two routes to the Internet, but each NIC going through its respective network...one is a /24 and the other a /28. So, i would think that this would require that "fancier setup", due to the fact that I want traffic going out each nic to go through its networks gateway. Now, what is this fancier setup?

Talk to your ISPs about setting up BGP peering. This probably involves getting an ASN from www.arin.net and a portable IP netblock.


[ If you don't understand what I just said, ask your ISP. ]

--
-Chuck
OK, I think that I need to make a few more points to make this clearer......sorry about that. The two networks that I have are from the same ISP. They get routed to me via the T1 and land on my serial port. What I have then are two ethernet ports on my router(for a total of three, counting the serial for the T1 link), which are the gateways for the networks that I want to bring up. Right now I have both of the networks up with machines attached which are passing traffic just fine. What I want to do is use one machine to send and receive packets or traffic with two NICs connected to their respective networks instead of using two separate machines to do the duty. It is a matter of telling the machine what to do with the traffic depending what network the traffic originated from. So, if I want traffic to flow using the second NIC, I need to be able to tell the traffic to go out the second NIC to the gateway for that network. Maybe, this is something that is just not possible, but I don't really see why it would be such a big deal, if traffic from a second NIC can traverse a plain old subnet. I just need to add a gateway to that subnet!
Ok, what I ultimately want to be able to do is send and receive email from both networks, as each of these network has a specific duty. I am interested in this to cut down on hardware costs, and have not investigated this at the application level to even be able to say it is possible. What I can do, is run another instance of the MTA if it comes down to it.


-Bob

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