First of all, I'd like to thank Andy Furniss for his direction and for helping me get a working example up and running. For the following set up to work, you will need a linux computer at the ISP (server), a linux computer at the client location (client), and some a public range of IP's you plan to send down to your client. (as this configuration involves patching the linux kernel, I assume you have already downloaded it, and have previously compiled a kernel) steps to set up the linux computers are ) make sure both computers have forwarding allowed (i do this with a 'net.ipv4.ip_forward = 1' line in my /etc/sysctl.conf) download iptables source, and patch-o-matic files from netfilter.org unzip those files. run the patch-o-matic script. when you get to the 'nth' and 'ROUTE' packages, select Y. then, in the kernel config, under networking options, under netfilter configuration, under iptables support, select nth, and under packet mangling, select ROUTE. compile the kernel, reboot with new kernel. compile iptables, make && make install. even after running make install, on my system, the two iptables libraries didnt make it to /lib/iptables, so i had to copy them manually. (copy libipt_nth.so and libipt_ROUTE.so from the iptables source to /lib/iptables) now, I use GRE tunnels from the server to the client to send inbound traffic, I assume you can use any kind of tunnel, just make sure support for whatever you want to use is installed in to the kernel. for the sake of the example, IP's will be defined as follows : Local IP at client : 66.81.23.1 (eth0) DSL #1 at client : 64.20.12.46 (eth1) (64.20.12.45 is gateway) DSL #2 at client : 64.20.12.50 (eth2) (64.20.12.49 is gateway) Public IP of server : 66.80.22.30 Public IP Range sent to client : 66.81.23.0/24 the tunnels need to be set up on both the client and the server --server-- ip tunnel add client_tun1 mode gre remote 66.20.12.46 local 66.80.22.30 ttl 255 ip tunnel add client_tun2 mode gre remote 66.20.12.50 local 66.80.22.30 ttl 255 ip link set client_tun1 up ip link set client_tun2 up ip addr add 172.16.0.1/30 dev client_tun1 ip addr add 172.16.0.5/30 dev client_tun2 --client-- ip tunnel add client_tun1 mode gre remote 66.80.22.30 local 66.20.12.46 ttl 255 ip tunnel add client_tun2 mode gre remote 66.80.22.30 local 66.20.12.50 ttl 255 ip link set client_tun1 up ip link set client_tun2 up ip addr add 172.16.0.2/30 dev client_tun1 ip addr add 172.16.0.6/30 dev client_tun2 traffic outbound from the client doesnt need to go out the tunnel, but it does need to be split --client-- iptables -A POSTROUTING --source 66.81.23.0/24 -t mangle -m nth --counter 0 --every 2 --packet 0 -j ROUTE --oif eth1 --gw 64.20.12.45 iptables -A POSTROUTING --source 66.81.23.0/24 -t mangle -m nth --counter 0 --every 2 --packet 1 -j ROUTE --oif eth2 --gw 64.20.12.49 traffic inbound to the client will go to the server, and come to client through the tunnel --server-- iptables -A POSTROUTING --destination 66.81.23.0/24 -t mangle -m nth --counter 0 --every 2 --packet 0 -j ROUTE --oif client_tun1 --gw 172.16.0.2 iptables -A POSTROUTING --destination 66.81.23.0/24 -t mangle -m nth --counter 0 --every 2 --packet 1 -j ROUTE --oif client_tun2 --gw 172.16.0.6 Of course this set up can be used to divide across more than two links, just duplicate / modify the lines as needed. Computers behind the client can now be given public IP's in that range, set their gateway to 66.81.23.1, and they're up and running on both lines. I hope this helps someone like me! Sincerely, Joe Comeaux _______________________________________________ LARTC mailing list / LARTC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://mailman.ds9a.nl/mailman/listinfo/lartc HOWTO: http://lartc.org/