--- Andy Furniss <andy.furniss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> escribió: > Andy Furniss wrote: > > >> So, my question would be, how to 'divide' or > >> 'recognize' incoming and outgoing traffic, and to > >> treat it as different channels?? I was thinking > about > >> using a IMQ device for incoming traffic, but this > >> apperas to be a 'little bit' more complicated > that > >> what I expected. So, may it be a way to do this > >> without installing IMQ ?? > > > > > > Yes you will need IMQ. > > Second thoughts - you may be able to do without IMQ > as long as it's just > forwarded traffic. > > Andy. > > Andy: What I am exactly doing is this: I receive all traffic from the cisco 1600, then, filter/shape/monitor it, then, if this traffic is destined to the remote subnet, it is send to the cisco 827, but, if the traffic is for the local subnet (including both ciscos, and the linux box), it is directly delivered to its destination. All of this is done via eth0, as much outgoing as incoming traffic. So, specially cosidering about the local subnet, do you think I should definitively use IMQ or not?? However, I have also posted in linuximq list, because I cannot find IMQ patch for my linux box (Redhat 7.3, 2.4.18-3 Kernel) Very thanks in advance. Ricardo. _________________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Información de Estados Unidos y América Latina, en Yahoo! Noticias. Visítanos en http://noticias.espanol.yahoo.com _______________________________________________ LARTC mailing list / LARTC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://mailman.ds9a.nl/mailman/listinfo/lartc HOWTO: http://lartc.org/