Date: Fri, 27 Oct 2000 00:47:43 -0400 From: Bakul Shah <bakul@torrentnet.com> To: Nick Rogness <nick@rapidnet.com> Cc: "Richard A. Steenbergen" <ras@e-gerbil.net>, "Ron 'The InSaNe One' Rosson" <insane@lunatic.oneinsane.net>, freebsd-net@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: Multihomed Routing Message-ID: <200010270447.e9R4lht14585@bacardi.torrentnet.com> In-Reply-To: Your message of "Thu, 26 Oct 2000 19:56:36 MDT." <Pine.BSF.4.21.0010261948400.29371-100000@rapidnet.com>
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> Sure that will work. However, consider the following: > > > > Network1 (2000 IP's) > | > | > |---Router1 > | > machine1---| > | > |---Router2 (default gateway) > > What happens to Router2 when machine1 is trying to access the IP's > on Router1's network? Router2 gets clogged down sending ICMP > redirects for Router1 back to machine1. The problem grows > exponetially[spelling] when you add more machines to the same > network machine1 is on. Unless I am missing something the redirect traffic won't grow exponentially. Machine1 will get one redirect per destination D and will switch its route to D to go via Router1. From then on it won't bother Router2 for D. So the total number of redirects is SUM(H[i]) for i = 1..number of servers, where H[i] == number of hosts server i talks to. So yes, there is some extra traffic but assuming your local network is far faster than your external connections this shouldn't be a problem (unless you send only a single packet to each destination). > Keep in mind, it only updates routes on machine1 for that IP...not > the subnet...at least on WInBlows. As per RFC 1812 a router will only generate host redirects. To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-net" in the body of the message
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