09-01-2010 09:55 AM - edited 03-04-2019 09:37 AM
Hi, We currently have an ISP that we point all of our default traffic too but recently added a new ISP that we will be migrating over to. Is there a way to do a source static on the edge router or ASA that will send default route traffic to the new ISP for certain sites without breaking the old default route?
Thank you in advance
09-01-2010 11:19 AM
Robert.Rizzo wrote:
Hi, We currently have an ISP that we point all of our default traffic too but recently added a new ISP that we will be migrating over to. Is there a way to do a source static on the edge router or ASA that will send default route traffic to the new ISP for certain sites without breaking the old default route?
Thank you in advance
It's not clear exactly what traffic you want to send to the new ASA because your diagram says you want to send default-route traffc or web traffic so why not just change the default route ?
However if you want to use the old default route for some traffic and the new ASA for other traffic you can use PBR on the 3rd party managed router. PBR can use an extended access-list so you can specify the traffic based on source/destination IP and source/destination port number.
If you could be more specific about exactly what you sent where we could provide an example of PBR.
Jon
09-01-2010 11:40 AM
Hi and thank you for your reply. I'm afraid if I move the default route to the new ASA/ISP it will break my inbound web server traffic coming from the internet? We have public to private nats on the old that will move over but I was hoping to do this one at a time instead of the all at once type of move.
Policy Based Routing is what I've been looking at but wanted to make sure there wasn't a simpler way since I need to contact Qwest and have them set it up.
Thanks
-B
09-01-2010 11:46 AM
Robert.Rizzo wrote:
Hi and thank you for your reply. I'm afraid if I move the default route to the new ASA/ISP it will break my inbound web server traffic coming from the internet? We have public to private nats on the old that will move over but I was hoping to do this one at a time instead of the all at once type of move.
Policy Based Routing is what I've been looking at but wanted to make sure there wasn't a simpler way since I need to contact Qwest and have them set it up.
Thanks
-B
Bob
Okay, that makes sense. No PBR is probably the easiest although with an MPLS network there is always the possibility of using separate vrf's each with their own default route but this may be more complicated to configure and as it is only temporary simplest way is probably the best.
Jon
Discover and save your favorite ideas. Come back to expert answers, step-by-step guides, recent topics, and more.
New here? Get started with these tips. How to use Community New member guide