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I have a cisco router with 4 ethernet interfaces, scenario is as follows :

2 x Dedicated Leased Lines (2MB and 4MB) 1 x Business Class DSL 10MB

4 3COM L2, Switches, connected to a Core Switch (3COM - Layer-2)

Core Switch Connected to 1 Ethernet Interface on our Cisco Router

I am now tasked to configure load-balancing so that our LAN Users can utilize all 3 WAN connections

Googling turned out that I would have to use BGP amongst / with service provider (not possible)

Question is :

a) If I cannot use BGP, do I have to use Policy Based Routing (PBR) or is there any other solution considering the above scenario and cisco router 3700 Series ?

b) Also, How would I enable QOS / Traffic Policing in this scenario? Would that apply per interface or globally - any configuration example would be really helpful ?

c) PBR is not load-balancing ? Right ? (My understanding, is that it simply routes a set of IP Address from one interface and others from another interface as configured ?

Will be grateful for your suggestions and help on this

Thanks and regards

2 Answers 2

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There are two main approaches that you can take on this to get both objectives of inbound and outbound load balancing working in concert, which I'll summarize.


With BGP

Requirements: BGP capable router, AS number, IP ranges that you're authorized to announce

When using BGP to balance load between multiple links, you're likely relying on it for all of your inbound and outbound traffic shaping, balancing, and failover, or else potentially using other options for shaping outbound traffic such as Optimized Edge Routing (aka Performance Routing).

The configuration will essentially look like this:

BGP balancing

So, in this situation, you have a public IP space (192.0.2.0/24) that each ISP is allowing you to advertise through their BGP peering session with you. Depending on the speed of the links, you can do a number of things to distribute the load as desired, but it's seldom an exact art.

For outbound traffic, you'll apply a route-map to incoming routes from each peer to adjust their priority.

For inbound traffic, you'll make changes to the routes that you're advertising to each peer; you can apply a path prepend (so that the path to your system through that ISP appears artificially longer and is less likely to be used), or a community string; a community string can allow remote influence of the behavior of another router for that route, but is specific to how it's handled in that AS - ask your ISP what strings to use for what you want to achieve.


Without BGP

Major caveat alert: with different ISPs assigning you different ranges, each assigned range is going to route to you over a different ISP; in essence, there's no effective way to expose a public service over an address that's accessible via all connections. From there, the workarounds are ugly at best; round-robin DNS across all of the public addresses and dynamic DNS services come to mind.

With multiple ISPs treating you as just a client with some statically assigned space, your options wane significantly. Outbound balancing is still semi-workable for certain definitions of "balancing," but the configurations get a lot uglier and a lot less flexible. Inbound traffic has no visibility whatsoever into your link's redundancy, really, no load balancing at all - your best option is to provide redundancy for internet services in another way; conversations initiated from a local device to an internet server will always be responded to on the same ISP link.

It looks like this:

without BGP

Each ISP just takes the packets you send them and routes back packets bound for your IP range on their link. Your router is doing separate NAT of internal hosts to the appropriate address space depending on what link it's going out. A given TCP conversation must continue to use the same link or it will be lost, which limits your dynamic load balancing capabilities; best to just use policy routing.


From what you've said, you're strictly in the "no BGP" section. So, to specifically address your questions:

Policy based routing is the tool you'll want to use for outbound traffic, yes. You can use extended ACLs as well as standard in matching, which means you can define rules based on services as well as just IPs. You can also look into configuring SLA monitors for your routes, to drop the route for a down ISP.

Inbound traffic is trickier, if you have any internet exposed services, and depends on what you're serving - round robin DNS and dynamic DNS services are options, but they're not good ones.

You'll likely want to do your traffic management (QoS/rate limits) on the external interface for each ISP.

Cisco has a couple of good examples on implementation specifics for a setup like this, take a look here for a configuration very close to what you're looking for.

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  • 1
    Very well written. Aug 23, 2011 at 20:36
  • Hi Shane Madden, Thank you so much for the most descriptive answer I have had so far on SF. We have been introduced with a product called Zywall USG 200 which does Load-Balancing (outgoing traffic) - I am thinking to use that, our Net.Eng. is also researching on how to configure PBR and QOS - so let's c :-) Once again, very much thankful for your expert insight / suggestion ! Kind Regards
    – Mutahir
    Sep 4, 2011 at 13:14
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You're kind of all over the place here. BGP is a routing protocol typically used to advertise your AS (autonomous system) to the Internet so that your public addresses can fail over from one ISP to the next. Though it's mechanisms may be used in some load balancing techniques, this isn't really its purpose.

Policy based routing could be used to balance traffic by changing the next-hop gateway based upon another condition like the source of the received packet. eg. you could have one network use one ISP, another use a different one.

I suggest, since these are small DSL lines that you take a look at something like a Sonicwall firewall which has a very simple mechanism for load balancing. You also need to consider that some applications will be broken by load balancing since not every client to server request is guaranteed to original from the same WAN address.

Your Cisco router may have some more capabilities than I am familiar with for achieving load balancing, but the pitfalls are the same.

Try this link here: http://www.cisco.com/en/US/tech/tk648/tk361/technologies_configuration_example09186a0080950834.shtml

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  • I would point out though that this design indicated that there is no way to specify a preference for connections. Since your ISP links are not equal in bandwidth, this might not work so well. Aug 23, 2011 at 16:10

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