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Thread: Force use of outgoing IP address




Force use of outgoing IP address
country flaguser name
United Kingdom
2007-06-01 11:42:43
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.


Re: Force use of outgoing IP address
country flaguser name
United States
2007-06-01 12:22:56
On 06/01/07 11:42, Neil Russell wrote:
> 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.

If you want ONLY the traffic that is destined to $DESTPRT to
use the 
alternative IP, you will probably need to set up multiple
routing tables 
similar in all respects except for the source IP used.  Then
you can use 
  "ip rule" to decide which traffic uses the
alternative routing table 
and source IP.  I.e. everything by default uses the main IP
address 
while only traffic destined to $DESTPRT uses the other IP. 
Is this what 
you are after?

> 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

Hugh?  Are you saying you want all traffic leaving the
system to have an 
IP address of 10.0.0.2 not 10.0.0.1?  If this is the case,
switch the 
first and second IP address in your configuration.  I
believe by default 
the system will use the primary IP address of an interface
as it's 
default that it bind traffic to.  I.e. eth0 verses eth0:1 /
eth0:2. 
Though I'm not sure, it may choose the lowest IP address not
the first one.

> Hope thats clear and that someone can advise.

No, not really.  I'm having trouble identifying which types
of traffic 
you are wanting to change both up top and down below.



Grant. . . .


Re: Force use of outgoing IP address
country flaguser name
United States
2007-06-01 12:24:31
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.n
et
-- 
John A. Sullivan III
Open Source Development Corporation
+1 207-985-7880
jsullivanopensourcedevel.com

Financially sustainable open source development
http://www.opensourced
evel.com



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