To start off, I have a FreeBSD router running Nat and dhcp, it is
currently the router for my LAN.

I was wondering if there was a way to aggregate more then one internet
connection using FreeBSD?

That is, have 2 or 3 internet connections coming in on seperate NICs,
and being able to have the box route and nat the packets accordingly to
the lan, thus giving the experience of more bandwidth. Is it even possible?

Has someone done it before? and if you have, do you have a webpage that
you followed instructions from?

I haven't done it, but I've saved the following email/posts that talked about this... I've left them intact so you can see the context...

good luck!

From [EMAIL PROTECTED] Wed Dec 24 09:35:16 2003
Date: Fri,  3 Nov 2000 18:46:34 -0600
From: Gerd Knops <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Simon Nielsen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Two ISP's. Two IP. One default route...

Simon Nielsen wrote:
Hello

I currently have two internet connections though two different ISP's.
One is a ADSL and another is shared with the rest of my dorm. The
shared line is rather slow because many people are using it.

I must have an IP on the shared connection since that's the only
place where I can be sure to have a non changing IP for my DNS. But
the ADSL is much faster so I would like to use that as much as
possible.

I can give my machine an IP on each connection but I can of course
only set one default route. The default route is currently set to the
ADSL. The problem is that when a connection is made to IP on the
shared connection my computer uses the ADSL IP to respond and that
does not work.

Is there a solution to this? I thought about maybe it is possible to
route differently when a connection is made on the shared connection
but I can't find out how to do it.

Yes, it can be done (though I have not found it documented anywhere). I really think there should be separate routing tables for each interface, but I don't know of any such feature in any Unix.

However ipfw can be abused for the above task. Assuming:

        - ipfw is set to pass on default
        - your ADSL IP/network is a.a.a.a/aa
        - your shared IP/network is s.s.s.s/ss
        - your ADSL gateway is set as default route
        - your shared gateway is s.s.s.gw

the following ipfw rules do the trick:

# Pass anything that should go via normal routes
# This rule is really just to speed up the bulk
# of the packets
add 1000 allow all from a.a.a.a to any
# Pass anything to local addresses on ADSL network
add 1010 allow all from any to a.a.a.a/aa
# Pass anything to local addesses on shared network
add 1020 allow all from any to s.s.s.s/ss
# And here the trick: if the source address is the one
# from the shared network, pass packets to the
# gateway on the shared network
add 1030 fwd s.s.s.gw all from s.s.s.s to any

With the above connections will leave your system on the same route they entered it. Great for redundant mail and dns setup!

If you already use ipfw you need to adapt the above rules accordingly. The important part is that packets coming from your host's shared address going to the 'outside' (and only those packets) are forwarded to the shared networks gateway.

Gerd


From [EMAIL PROTECTED] Wed Dec 24 09:35:23 2003
Date: Sat, 4 Nov 2000 09:34:48 -0600 (CST)
From: Mike Meyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Simon Nielsen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Two ISP's. Two IP. One default route...
Resent-Date: Wed, 24 Dec 2003 10:35:16 -0800 (PST)
Resent-From: Philip Hallstrom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Resent-To: Philip Hallstrom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Resent-Subject: Re: Two ISP's. Two IP. One default route...

Simon Nielsen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> types:
I currently have two internet connections though two different ISP's.
One is a ADSL and another is shared with the rest of my dorm. The shared
line is rather slow because many people are using it.

I must have an IP on the shared connection since that's the only place
where I can be sure to have a non changing IP for my DNS. But the ADSL
is much faster so I would like to use that as much as possible.

Question: what are you using the static IP for? I.e. - who connects to
it, and vice versa?

I can give my machine an IP on each connection but I can of course only
set one default route. The default route is currently set to the ADSL.
The problem is that when a connection is made to IP on the shared
connection my computer uses the ADSL IP to respond and that does not
work.

Is there a solution to this? I thought about maybe it is possible to
route differently when a connection is made on the shared connection but
I can't find out how to do it.

Well, if you can narrow down who connect on the shared connection, you
can add a route for those addresses pointing to the shared
connection. It's been about five years, but I used to do that, but if
the only people connecting to the shared IP are on the campus net, you
can add a route that looks like

        route add -net campus.net static.ip [campus.netmask]

        <mike


-------- Original Message --------
Subject: two isps routing
Date: Wed, 28 Jan 2004 16:38:52 -0800 (PST)

http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Adv-Routing-HOWTO/lartc.rpdb.multiple-links.html

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