On Friday 10 Feb 2012 04:42:51 Pandu Poluan wrote: > On Fri, Feb 10, 2012 at 10:48, Pandu Poluan <pa...@poluan.info> wrote: > > Scenario: I have a server in the cloud that needs to connect to an > > internal server in the office. There are 2 incoming connections into my > > office, ISP "A" and ISP "B". The primary connection is A, but if A goes > > down, we can use B. The app running on the cloud server has no automatic > > failover ability (i.e., if A goes down, someone must change the app's > > conf to point to B). > > > > My thought: If I can make a tunnel from the server to the FortiGate > > firewall currently guarding the HQ, the cloud app can simply be > > configured to connect to the internal IP address of the internal server. > > No need to manually change the app's conf. > > > > The need: a VPN client that: > > + can selectively send packets fulfilling a criteria (in this case, dest= > > IP address of internal server)*
As far as I know typical VPNs require the IP address (or FQDN) of the VPN gateway. If yours changes because ISP A goes down then the tunnel will fail and be torn down. > > + has automatic failover and failback ability Right, I don't know if one exists with this functionality - because this is not a typical VPN function but one offered by load balancers/fall back servers or routers. > > *solutions involving iptables and iproute2 are also acceptable I am convinced that you can do that by clever enough routing on a linux box, but cannot recall where I last read about it. > > Can anyone point me to the right direction re: what package and the > > relevant howto? > > > > Thanks in advance. > > I have been doing some research, and... > > Do you think I can do that using HAProxy running in tcp mode? > > My thought goes like this: Have the cloud app connect the IP:port of > HAProxy, and let HAProxy perform a TCP proxy (NAT?) to connect to the > internal server via A or B according to the "server checks". I haven't used HAProxy, but would consider setting up a fallback route at the HQ router end. This is also called a failover configuration. The router pings one address, say ISP A and if that fails more than x times over y pings then it switches over the connection to ISP B. This keeps it at a lower level in the OSI model, which is less complicated and therefore easier to manage. -- Regards, Mick
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