I don't have any problem with two nic's, first one is for internal traffic (LAN) and the other ones is dedicated for WAN traffic (Internet)
both nic's work at differents subnet 2011/7/25 M. Hamzah Khan <ham...@hamzahkhan.com> > On Mon, 2011-07-25 at 12:17 -0400, Overkill wrote: > > Has anyone noticed that even if you use two network cards that only one > > nic is really doing all the traffic. I noticed this with many different > > types of network cards and nics. I even setup snmp monitoring, cacti, > > etc and noticed that both IP's and one interface is doing all the work. > > Even setup bonding and still does the same thing. > > Both interfaces won't be used. > > Packets will travel out of which ever interface has a route to their > destination. > > If both interfaces have the same route, then it'll use the route with > the lower metric. > > With bonding, it depends on the mode you are using. > > If you are using 802.3ad, then from what I understand (someone correct > me if I'm wrong here!), you won't get the speed of both interfaces (ie, > 2x gigabit ports bonded together won't mean you can transfer a single > file at 2 gigabits/s) but rather you can have two separate transfers > that together are going at 2 gigabits/s. > > > Is this a driver issue or am I simply not using enterprise hardware? > > > > -Overkill > > -- > users mailing list > users@lists.fedoraproject.org > To unsubscribe or change subscription options: > https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users > Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines >
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