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I have two DSL accounts - each with a different ISP (one for international
and one for local cap due to pricing differences). I like playing online games (Battlefield 2142) which is quite bandwidth hungry and therefore use the local account with large cap (and cheaper). Should I need to browse normally, I will use the international account. Ideally, one would like to setup a simulateous dialup scenario where traffic is managed across the two accounts depending on local or international use. The problem - Vista seems only able to handle one broadband dialup at a time? I have found a tool called RouteSentry which has been written for this purpose (it's in beta for Vista). I managed to successfully setup the two dialup "adaptors" under each account - each configured as a broadband dial-up. The program doesn't however want to allow two simultaneous connections, hence my question whether the limitation might be OS specific? Any suggestions how to fix? My modem is in bridge mode allow for such connections. Thank you |
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On Tue, 8 May 2007 12:59:02 -0700, B007Cyber
wrote: I have two DSL accounts - each with a different ISP (one for international and one for local cap due to pricing differences). I like playing online games (Battlefield 2142) which is quite bandwidth hungry and therefore use the local account with large cap (and cheaper). Should I need to browse normally, I will use the international account. Ideally, one would like to setup a simulateous dialup scenario where traffic is managed across the two accounts depending on local or international use. The problem - Vista seems only able to handle one broadband dialup at a time? I have found a tool called RouteSentry which has been written for this purpose (it's in beta for Vista). I managed to successfully setup the two dialup "adaptors" under each account - each configured as a broadband dial-up. The program doesn't however want to allow two simultaneous connections, hence my question whether the limitation might be OS specific? Any suggestions how to fix? My modem is in bridge mode allow for such connections. Thank you Since you're mentioning browsing vs gaming as the determining factor in gateway choice, it sounds like a QOS issue from here. I've seen this question asked in a number of forums, and usually the Linux firewall experts trot out one of the custom firewall / routers (MonoWall I believe is a favourite). I am curious - you start with DSL ("two DSL accounts") then move into dialup ("simulateous dialup scenario"). Is there a reason why you want the computer to do the routing, or are you open to using a dual WAN router? -- Cheers, Chuck, MS-MVP [Windows - Networking] http://nitecruzr.blogspot.com/ Paranoia is not a problem, when it's a normal response from experience. My email is AT DOT actual address pchuck mvps org. |
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Hi Chuck,
I use the terms DSL and dial-up in the same context since I have configured Vista to use the broadband dial-up feature (i.e. to manually control which account to dial to). My problem is that I only have 1 DSL line (provided by the company who has a monopily in SA and no other choices) and 2 ISP accounts providing the access/cap. Previously I only had 1 ISP account and then configured my router/modem (Netgear DG834GT) to handle the internet link/authentication. As stated, the single ISP account proved to be expensive since it couldn't distinguish between local and international sites and hence used all my cap for playing games on local servers (and then normally ran out of my 3Gig allowance before month end). I recently purchased a Netgear WNR854T router (Rangemax Next 11n with built-in Gigabit switch) which has no DSL modem - so I had to setup my previous router to run in modem mode and use the better router to link my wireless network (wireless Media Center PC for streaming media, wireless print server and 2 other desktops needing access to internet). You mention QOS - is this meant to say I need to consider a Linux solution? Also, I'm not familiar with MonoWall and will do some further research. Thanks Charlie "Chuck" wrote: On Tue, 8 May 2007 12:59:02 -0700, B007Cyber wrote: I have two DSL accounts - each with a different ISP (one for international and one for local cap due to pricing differences). I like playing online games (Battlefield 2142) which is quite bandwidth hungry and therefore use the local account with large cap (and cheaper). Should I need to browse normally, I will use the international account. Ideally, one would like to setup a simulateous dialup scenario where traffic is managed across the two accounts depending on local or international use. The problem - Vista seems only able to handle one broadband dialup at a time? I have found a tool called RouteSentry which has been written for this purpose (it's in beta for Vista). I managed to successfully setup the two dialup "adaptors" under each account - each configured as a broadband dial-up. The program doesn't however want to allow two simultaneous connections, hence my question whether the limitation might be OS specific? Any suggestions how to fix? My modem is in bridge mode allow for such connections. Thank you Since you're mentioning browsing vs gaming as the determining factor in gateway choice, it sounds like a QOS issue from here. I've seen this question asked in a number of forums, and usually the Linux firewall experts trot out one of the custom firewall / routers (MonoWall I believe is a favourite). I am curious - you start with DSL ("two DSL accounts") then move into dialup ("simulateous dialup scenario"). Is there a reason why you want the computer to do the routing, or are you open to using a dual WAN router? -- Cheers, Chuck, MS-MVP [Windows - Networking] http://nitecruzr.blogspot.com/ Paranoia is not a problem, when it's a normal response from experience. My email is AT DOT actual address pchuck mvps org. |
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On Wed, 9 May 2007 08:43:01 -0700, B007Cyber
wrote: "Chuck" wrote: On Tue, 8 May 2007 12:59:02 -0700, B007Cyber wrote: I have two DSL accounts - each with a different ISP (one for international and one for local cap due to pricing differences). I like playing online games (Battlefield 2142) which is quite bandwidth hungry and therefore use the local account with large cap (and cheaper). Should I need to browse normally, I will use the international account. Ideally, one would like to setup a simulateous dialup scenario where traffic is managed across the two accounts depending on local or international use. The problem - Vista seems only able to handle one broadband dialup at a time? I have found a tool called RouteSentry which has been written for this purpose (it's in beta for Vista). I managed to successfully setup the two dialup "adaptors" under each account - each configured as a broadband dial-up. The program doesn't however want to allow two simultaneous connections, hence my question whether the limitation might be OS specific? Any suggestions how to fix? My modem is in bridge mode allow for such connections. Thank you Since you're mentioning browsing vs gaming as the determining factor in gateway choice, it sounds like a QOS issue from here. I've seen this question asked in a number of forums, and usually the Linux firewall experts trot out one of the custom firewall / routers (MonoWall I believe is a favourite). I am curious - you start with DSL ("two DSL accounts") then move into dialup ("simulateous dialup scenario"). Is there a reason why you want the computer to do the routing, or are you open to using a dual WAN router? Hi Chuck, I use the terms DSL and dial-up in the same context since I have configured Vista to use the broadband dial-up feature (i.e. to manually control which account to dial to). My problem is that I only have 1 DSL line (provided by the company who has a monopily in SA and no other choices) and 2 ISP accounts providing the access/cap. Previously I only had 1 ISP account and then configured my router/modem (Netgear DG834GT) to handle the internet link/authentication. As stated, the single ISP account proved to be expensive since it couldn't distinguish between local and international sites and hence used all my cap for playing games on local servers (and then normally ran out of my 3Gig allowance before month end). I recently purchased a Netgear WNR854T router (Rangemax Next 11n with built-in Gigabit switch) which has no DSL modem - so I had to setup my previous router to run in modem mode and use the better router to link my wireless network (wireless Media Center PC for streaming media, wireless print server and 2 other desktops needing access to internet). You mention QOS - is this meant to say I need to consider a Linux solution? Also, I'm not familiar with MonoWall and will do some further research. Thanks Charlie Hi Charlie, I THINK that I get it. You have single line DSL connectivity, and you're using a pair of PPPoE (that's dial up DSL) accounts?? You are the first person I've met that uses dual homed PPPoE. Your case is the actual justification behind PPPoE, as it was originally developed. Single WAN routing, over a dual homed PPPoE, isn't going to be the same as a simple dual WAN router. You MIGHT get help from the Linux firewall / router aficionados, but you may be beyond the capability of some of them too. QOS is the ability for a network device to prioritise network traffic as a function of its immediate need. Gaming, and streamed audio and video, needs to be promptly passed, while mere web browsing can wait sometimes. So the browser gets a lower QOS. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quality_of_service http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quality_of_service PPPoE is a DSL function, not a firewall / router issue. Firewalls and routers are IP devices, and you need DSL experts. You're using the Microsoft CDO right now. You're going to need to post in comp. dcom. xdsl . You can use Google Groups for that. http://groups.google.com/group/comp.dcom.xdsl/ http://groups.google.com/group/comp.dcom.xdsl/ Check with comp. security. firewalls too, in case the Linux firewall experts have a solution. http://groups.google.com/group/comp.security.firewalls/ http://groups.google.com/group/comp.security.firewalls/ You also might get help in the DSL Reports Networking forum. http://www.dslreports.com/forum/sharing http://www.dslreports.com/forum/sharing Whatever you get from the experts, I'd really appreciate hearing from you. -- Cheers, Chuck, MS-MVP [Windows - Networking] http://nitecruzr.blogspot.com/ Paranoia is not a problem, when it's a normal response from experience. My email is AT DOT actual address pchuck mvps org. |
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Hi Chuck, As it stands, XP cannot run multiple PPPoE connections simultaneously, instead there was a protocol developed called "RASPPPoE" which would allow you to create two wan end points on a single dsl line. Why would you want to do that? Well, With having two wan endpoints, each endpoint through a different ISP/account we can manage our internet traffic, routing internationally or locally. Reason? Local bandwidth is the fraction of the price of international bandwidth. Now with reference back to xp, You could establish two wan connections using RASPPPoE, then setup the routing tables, or you could use a program developed called "routesentry" which would connect for you and setup the routing automatically. The big question, Vista: Does vista have built in support running two PPPoE connections simultaneously? Or should we wait for a third party vendor to create a protocol? P.S Works beautifully in XP, routing the traffic through each PPPoE account accordingly RASPPPoE Found he 'RASPPPOE - PPP over Ethernet Protocol by Robert Schlabbach' (http://www.raspppoe.com/) Routesentry found he 'Antibody Software - Route Sentry - Local/International Traffic Router Utility' (http://antibody-software.com/web/ind...15&Itemi d=32) -- Mack |