As described here you cant do that.
How can you add a subnet address to a vlan? you can add an ip address to a layer3 interface as secondary, is that what you mean?
Regardless, i wouldnt recommend doing that, it is simpler to create another layer3 interface either physical or logical and add...
Just fiddle with your Addressing schema. I am presuming since you are asking this question, you are small office outfit. I doubt you will have any impact in using a larger addressing space. I am also presuming you dont have public addresses assigned to your network nodes, if you are use private...
I agree with your assessment. For load balancing across two internet connections, outbound, for a small company statics would do fine.
But if you are hosting services, you need to look at this from a different angle.
Using BGP with 2 different ISP will not however Load Balance, BGP only...
You cant Redirect traffic down the same interface on a PIX, if this is what you mean.
As KiscoKid is implying this can be fixed with DNS. You need your inside DNS server to resolve for mail.domain.net to the internal IP address of your email server, and the outside DNS server to resolve to the...
Dont know what to say to you, if you dont bother to read links I post, then I am unsure how on earth I am going to *prove* something to you.
Anyway I will attempt to theorise a concept for you, but you could just prove this to yourself on a router...
Are you aware that you can create 2 Static...
IIRC = If I Recall Correctly
http://www.tek-tips.com/faqs.cfm?fid=387
http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios122/122cgcr/fipr_c/ipcprt2/1cfindep.htm#wp1025915
Static routes will install 6 parallel routes to a destination, you can change it using the maximum-paths maximum...
The DLCI's are Locally significant, so no thats not correct, the DLCI locally refers to the PVC, which is the map between the 2 DTE devices... At the other end, a different dlci may map the same PVC
UnaBomber
ccnp mcse2k
Yeap, you could do that, you can also load share across equal paths with static routes IIRC.
Anyway he needs load balancing inbound sessions, which is a whole different thing, BGP is the way forward, and yes you will have to get your Telco involved
UnaBomber
ccnp mcse2k
Not usual, unless your ISP is brown-outing, or your packets are all taking different routes...
You say the telnet session is dropped, but is the tunnel broke?
UnaBomber
ccnp mcse2k
Are you talking about access lists on the firewall?
By the way you would get a quicker response if you posted in the PIX section on this board..
http://www.netcraftsmen.net/welcher/papers/pix02.html
http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/110/23.html
UnaBomber
ccnp mcse2k
yeap, the 2800 series supports QoS, including the 2801 I believe
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/ps5854/products_data_sheet0900aecd8016fa68.html
UnaBomber
ccnp mcse2k
Yes its possible, Is this for a WAN configuration, to another Site, or just for access to the WWW (multi-homed)?
If WWW you can use BGP or static floating routes
If WAN you can use HSRP and track a tunnel to another IP address on the other side of the WAN.
Both will give you redundancy and...
ohh shoot :)
yeap
Ip nat inside source static x.x.x.x y.y.y.y
where y.y.y.y is the destination address and it gets nated to x.x.x.x, thus y is global x is local
<--- engage brain first
UnaBomber
ccnp mcse2k
Its the wrong way round.
You need to nat to structure your nat statement like this:
ip nat inside source static Global_IP Local_IP
This will mean that a destination IP of Global_IP will be nated to Local_IP.
UnaBomber
ccnp mcse2k
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