Policy routing issue???
Has anyone tried policy routing? I can't seem to still make it fail-over to the other WAN when the selected WAN is down.
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ceejaybassist wrote
Has anyone tried policy routing? I can't seem to still make it fail-over to the other WAN when the selected WAN is down.
Please share your test methodology and configuration. Controller version, model version and firmware.
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Controller: OC200 v1 5.12.9
Gateway: ER605 v2 2.2.2
Use Case: I want to separate browsing and gaming. WAN1 to be for browsing/downloading/streaming, and WAN2 only for gaming.
Here are my configurations:
I've unchecked the "Use the WAN port if the current one is down" because of this issue.
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If you set the WAN/LAN1 as the backup WAN, it is offline while primary is up.
Then the Policy Routing become useless in this situation.
Policy Routing concept is correct. To do what you want, you need at least two entries. But you should not set the failover.
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Clive_A wrote
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If you set the WAN/LAN1 as the backup WAN, it is offline while primary is up.
Then the Policy Routing become useless in this situation.
Policy Routing concept is correct. To do what you want, you need at least two entries. But you should not set the failover.
@Clive_A How to correctly configure it then? Should I duplicate the same rule but select the other WAN?
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ceejaybassist wrote
Clive_A wrote
Thanks for posting in our business forum.
If you set the WAN/LAN1 as the backup WAN, it is offline while primary is up.
Then the Policy Routing become useless in this situation.
Policy Routing concept is correct. To do what you want, you need at least two entries. But you should not set the failover.
@Clive_A How to correctly configure it then? Should I duplicate the same rule but select the other WAN?
You don't configure failover. Just configure two Policy Routing based on your need. That's it. You need to specify the services like TCP or UDP and other for different purposes.
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So should I disable the fail-over in here, then, and let the policy routing handle the fail-over?
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ceejaybassist wrote
So should I disable the fail-over in here, then, and let the policy routing handle the fail-over?
Yes.
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But this is what you need.. I don't think it is too complicated to configure. If you don't believe this is the correct way, you can search this situation on other brands and see how they get this done.
Basically, you need to create the rules based on what you need. There is no shortcut as far as I can tell.
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@Clive_A What will happen then to those I don't configure in Policy routing? Let's say, I configured only one rule, for ports 443 and 80 to be routed to WAN1, and fail-over to WAN2 if WAN1 is down. What will happen then to the others outside this rule if I don't configure them in policy routing?
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