Yeah, the client connections are coming from one data link. The outbound connections are on another, but there's 4 IPs on that interface. do you have any suggestions, tips, or links to help me with configuration? cheers, Ian On Sat, Aug 2, 2008 at 11:54 PM, Jose Ildefonso Camargo Tolosa <ildefonso.camargo@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi! > > I have done this kind of stuff using mainly SNAT rules (iptables on > Linux), but as for squid itself.. dunno. > > Why do they want to use the 5 IPs?, are these from one single data link?. > > If they are trying to load balance across different links, the > configuration is more complicated (but still possible, and have probed > to work very well for me). > > c-ya! > > Ildefonso. > > On Sun, Aug 3, 2008 at 9:31 PM, Ian Savoy <iansavoy@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> I've been asked to configure a squid proxy for a small business. My >> client wants me to configure squid on a server with a block of 5 IPs, >> and do it in a way that outbound requests are, for lack of a better >> term, load-balanced across the servers own IP block. I guess kind of >> anonymizing which IP the requests are coming from. Is there any way >> of doing this? I know i can set certain protocols to go out certain >> IPs, but how do I randomize it? If I can't randomize it, is there a >> way to control it from the client without running several instances of >> squid on the server? >> >> Thanks in advance, >> >> Ian >> >