From: "John A. Sullivan III" <jsullivan@opensourcedevel.com>
To: Neil Russell <NeilR@mulberry.com>
Cc: netfilter@lists.netfilter.org
Subject: Re: Force use of outgoing IP address
Date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 13:24:31 -0400 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <1180718671.6539.1.camel@localhost> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <B3FAB89EFECD684E9E648B81133263F1466025@MAIL_COM.MULBERRY.COM>
On Fri, 2007-06-01 at 17:42 +0100, Neil Russell wrote:
> Hi,
>
> new to all this so please be gentle with me....
>
> I have a linux router with 3 network cards in, each card has multiple IP
> address's assigned. I want to route all aoutbound traffic TO a
> destination port of $DESTPRT out of eth0 on its IPAddress of 10.0.0.2
>
>
> Example is
>
> Eth0 has IP address's of
> 10.0.0.1
> 10.0.0.2
> 10.0.0.3
> and connects to 10.0.0.99 (Internet router)
>
> eth1 has ip address's of
> 192.168.0.1
> 192.168.0.2
> 192.168.0.3
>
>
> and eth3 has ip address's of
> 192.168.1.0
> 192.168.1.2
> 192.168.1.3
>
>
> So ALL traffic on the router with a destination address MUST go out on
> eth0 and show its IP address as 10.0.0.2 even though the default route
> is out via 10.0.0.1
>
> Hope thats clear and that someone can advise.
>
>
> Neil.
>
I believe you're going to want to use iproute2 to do this. There is a
somewhat dated slideshow on doing something very close to this (if I
recall correctly) in the training section of http://iscs.sourceforge.net
--
John A. Sullivan III
Open Source Development Corporation
+1 207-985-7880
jsullivan@opensourcedevel.com
Financially sustainable open source development
http://www.opensourcedevel.com
prev parent reply other threads:[~2007-06-01 17:24 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 3+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2007-06-01 16:42 Force use of outgoing IP address Neil Russell
2007-06-01 17:22 ` Grant Taylor
2007-06-01 17:24 ` John A. Sullivan III [this message]
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